Management ELEVENTH EDITION This page intentionally left blank Prentice Hall Boston Columbus Indianapolis New York San Francisco Upper Saddle River Amsterdam Cape Town Dubai London Madrid Milan Munich Paris Montreal Toronto Delhi Mexico City Sao Paulo Sydney Hong Kong Seoul Singapore Taipei Tokyo Editorial Director: Sally Yagan Editor in Chief: Eric Svendsen Acquisitions Editor: Kim Norbuta Director of Editorial Services: Ashley Santora Editorial Project Manager: Claudia Fernandes Editorial Assistant: Carter Anderson Director of Marketing: Patrice Lumumba Jones Marketing Manager: Nikki Ayana Jones Marketing Assistant: Ian Gold Senior Managing Editor: Judy Leale Senior Operations Supervisor: Arnold Vila Design Development Manager: John Christiana Art Director: Kathryn Foot Text and Cover Designer: Kathryn Foot Photo Development Editor: Nancy Moudry Editorial Media Project Manager: Denise Vaughn MyLab Product Manager: Joan Waxman Media Project Manager: Lisa Rinaldi Full-Service Project Management: Sharon Anderson/BookMasters, Inc. 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Many of the designations by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this book, and the publisher was aware of a trademark claim, the designations have been printed in initial caps or all caps. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Robbins, Stephen P. Management / Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter. — 11th ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-13-216384-2 1. Management. I. Coulter, Mary K. II. Title. HD31.R5647 2012 658—dc22 2010035514 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 ISBN 10: 0-13-216384-5 ISBN 13: 978-0-13-216384-2 � To my wife, Laura Steve To my family: Ron Sarah and James Katie and Matt and our newest addition, Brooklynn Mary � v STEPHEN P. ROBBINS (Ph.D., University of Arizona) is professor emeritus of management at San Diego State University and the world’s best-selling textbook author in the areas of both management and organizational behavior. His books are used at more than 1,000 U.S. colleges and universities, have been translated into 19 languages, and have adapted editions for Canada, Australia, South Africa, and India. Dr. Robbins is also the author of the best-selling The Truth About Managing People, 2nd ed. (Financial Times/Prentice Hall, 2008) and Decide & Conquer (Financial Times/Prentice Hall, 2004). In his “other life,” Dr. Robbins actively participates in masters’ track competitions. Since turning 50 in 1993, he’s won 21 national championships and 12 world titles. He was inducted into the U.S. Masters’ Track & Field Hall of Fame in 2005. Dr. Robbins is the current world record holder at 100m (12.37) and 200m (25.20) for men 65 and over. MARY COULTER (Ph.D., University of Arkansas) is professor emeritus at Missouri State University. Dr. Coulter has published other books with Prentice Hall, including Strategic Management in Action, now in its fifth edition, and Entrepreneurship in Action, which is in its second edition. During her “free” time, Dr. Coulter enjoys puttering around in her flower garden, trying new recipes on family members (usually successful!), reading a variety of books, and enjoying many different activities with Ron, Sarah and James, Katie and Matt, and first granddaughter, Brooklynn. vi Preface xxiii Part I Chapter 1 Module Chapter 2 Introduction to Management Management and Organizations 2 Management History 27 Understanding Management’s Context: Constraints and Challenges Part II Integrative Managerial Issues Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Managing in a Global Environment 68 Managing Diversity 96 Managing Social Responsibility and Ethics Managing Change and Innovation 150 Part III 122 Planning Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Module Managers as Decision Makers 176 Foundations of Planning 202 Strategic Management 222 Planning Tools and Techniques 248 Part IV Organizing Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Module Chapter 13 42 Basic Organizational Design 262 Adaptive Organizational Design 286 Managing Human Resources 310 Managing Your Career 340 Managing Teams 344 Part V Leading Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Part VI Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Appendix: Understanding Individual Behavior 370 Managers and Communication 402 Motivating Employees 428 Managers as Leaders 458 Controlling Introduction to Controlling 484 Managing Operations 514 Managing Entrepreneurial Ventures Endnotes 561 Name Index 607 Organization Index Glindex 628 Photo Credits 643 537 624 vii This page intentionally left blank Preface xxiii Part I Introduction to Management Chapter 1 Management and Organizations 2 Why Are Managers Important? 4 Who Are Managers and Where Do They Work? Who Is a Manager? 5 5 Where Do Managers Work? 6 What Do Managers Do? Management Functions 8 9 Mintzberg’s Managerial Roles and a Contemporary Model of Managing Management Skills 12 How Is the Manager’s Job Changing? 13 Importance of Customers to the Manager’s Job 14 Importance of Innovation to the Manager’s Job 16 Importance of Sustainability to the Manager’s Job Why Study Management? 17 The Universality of Management 17 The Reality of Work 10 16 18 Rewards and Challenges of Being a Manager 18 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 4 BY THE NUMBERS 5 FUTURE VISION | The Working World in 2020 7 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Andrew Cherng 12 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 19 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 20 21 21 Case Application 1: More Than a Good Story Case Application 2: Flight Plans Module 23 24 Management History 27 Early Management 28 Classical Approach 29 Behavioral Approach Quantitative Approach 32 34 Contemporary Approaches 36 ix x CONTENTS Chapter 2 Understanding Management’s Context: Constraints and Challenges 42 The Manager: Omnipotent or Symbolic? 44 The Omnipotent View 44 The Symbolic View 45 The External Environment: Constraints and Challenges 46 The Economic Environment 47 The Demographic Environment 47 How the External Environment Affects Managers 48 Organizational Culture: Constraints and Challenges 51 What Is Organizational Culture? Strong Cultures 51 52 Where Culture Comes From and How It Continues 54 How Employees Learn Culture 55 How Culture Affects Managers 56 Current Issues in Organizational Culture 58 Creating an Innovative Culture 58 Creating a Customer-Responsive Culture 58 Spirituality and Organizational Culture 58 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 44 FUTURE VISION | The Working World in 2020 47 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Betsy McLaughlin BY THE NUMBERS 56 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 61 50 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 63 63 Case Application 1: Out of Control Case Application 2: Dressing Up Part II 65 66 Integrative Managerial Issues Chapter 3 Managing in a Global Environment Who Owns What? 68 70 What’s Your Global Perspective? 71 Understanding the Global Environment Regional Trading Alliances 72 Global Trade Mechanisms 76 Doing Business Globally 77 Different Types of International Organizations How Organizations Go International 78 Managing in a Global Environment The Political/Legal Environment The Economic Environment The Cultural Environment 78 80 80 81 Global Management in Today’s World 84 80 72 62 CONTENTS Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 70 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Indra Nooyi BY THE NUMBERS 77 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 87 72 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes 88 Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 89 89 Case Application 1: Held Hostage 91 Case Application 2: Global Stumble Chapter 4 Managing Diversity Diversity 101 93 96 98 What Is Workplace Diversity? 98 Why Is Managing Workforce Diversity So Important? The Changing Workplace 100 102 Characteristics of the U.S. Population 102 What About Global Workforce Changes? Types of Workplace Diversity 103 105 Age 105 Gender 106 Race and Ethnicity 107 Disability/Abilities Religion 108 109 GLBT: Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Other Types of Diversity Challenges in Managing Diversity Personal Bias 110 Glass Ceiling 112 Workplace Diversity Initiatives 110 112 The Legal Aspect of Workplace Diversity 113 Top Management Commitment to Diversity Mentoring 109 110 114 114 Diversity Skills Training 115 Employee Resource Groups 115 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 98 BY THE NUMBERS 109 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Kenneth I. Chenault My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 116 112 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 117 118 118 Case Application 1: Mission Possible: Strategic Diversity 120 Case Application 2: Women in Management at Deutsche Telekom: Part 2 121 xi xii CONTENTS Chapter 5 Managing Social Responsibility and Ethics What Is Social Responsibility? 122 124 From Obligations to Responsiveness to Responsibility Should Organizations Be Socially Involved? Green Management and Sustainability How Organizations Go Green 124 126 127 127 Evaluating Green Management Actions 129 Managers and Ethical Behavior 129 Factors That Determine Ethical and Unethical Behavior Ethics in an International Context Encouraging Ethical Behavior Employee Selection 135 135 Codes of Ethics and Decision Rules Leadership 130 133 135 137 Job Goals and Performance Appraisal Ethics Training 137 138 Independent Social Audits Protective Mechanisms 139 139 Social Responsibility and Ethics Issues In Today’s World 139 Managing Ethical Lapses and Social Irresponsibility Social Entrepreneurship 139 140 Businesses Promoting Positive Social Change 141 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 124 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Yvon Chouinard 128 BY THE NUMBERS 132 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 142 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 144 145 Case Application 1: Lessons from Lehman Brothers: Will We Ever Learn? 147 Case Application 2: Green Up on Aisle Two Chapter 6 143 148 Managing Change and Innovation 150 The Change Process 152 Two Views of the Change Process 152 Types of Organizational Change What Is Organizational Change? Types of Change 154 155 155 Managing Resistance to Change Why Do People Resist Change? 158 158 Techniques for Reducing Resistance to Change 158 Contemporary Issues in Managing Change Changing Organizational Culture 159 Employee Stress 161 Making Change Happen Successfully Stimulating Innovation 165 Creativity Versus Innovation 166 Stimulating and Nurturing Innovation 164 166 159 CONTENTS Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 152 FUTURE VISION | The Working World in 2020 156 BY THE NUMBERS 162 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Ratan Tata 168 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 169 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 171 171 Case Application 1: Too Big to Change? Case Application 2: Stress Kills Part III Chapter 7 170 174 175 Planning Managers as Decision Makers 176 The Decision-Making Process Step 1: Identifying a Problem 178 179 Step 2: Identifying Decision Criteria 180 Step 3: Allocating Weights to the Criteria Step 4: Developing Alternatives Step 5: Analyzing Alternatives 180 181 181 Step 6: Selecting an Alternative 182 Step 7: Implementing the Alternative 182 Step 8: Evaluating Decision Effectiveness Managers Making Decisions Making Decisions: Rationality 182 182 183 Making Decisions: Bounded Rationality 183 Making Decisions: The Role of Intuition 184 Making Decisions: The Role of Evidence-Based Management Types of Decisions and Decision-Making Conditions 185 Types of Decisions 185 Decision-Making Conditions 187 Decision-Making Styles 190 Linear–Nonlinear Thinking Style Profile 190 Decision-Making Biases and Errors 190 Overview of Managerial Decision Making 192 Effective Decision Making in Today’s World 192 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 178 FUTURE VISION | The Working World in 2020 187 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Mikhail D. Prokhorov 189 BY THE NUMBERS 193 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 194 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 195 196 196 Case Application 1: The Curtain Falls 199 Case Application 2: Underwater Chaos 200 185 xiii xiv CONTENTS Chapter 8 Foundations of Planning 202 The What and Why of Planning What Is Planning? 204 204 Why Do Managers Plan? 205 Planning and Performance Goals and Plans 205 205 Types of Goals 206 Types of Plans 207 Setting Goals and Developing Plans Approaches to Setting Goals Developing Plans 208 208 211 Approaches to Planning 212 Contemporary Issues in Planning 212 How Can Managers Plan Effectively in Dynamic Environments? 213 How Can Managers Use Environmental Scanning? 214 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 204 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Jeff Bezos 208 BY THE NUMBERS 211 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 215 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 216 217 217 Case Application 1: Icelandic Volcano, 1; Global Commerce, 0 219 Case Application 2: Building a Future Chapter 9 Strategic Management 222 Strategic Management 224 What Is Strategic Management? 220 224 Why Is Strategic Management Important? 225 The Strategic Management Process 226 Step 1: Identifying the Organization’s Current Mission, Goals, and Strategies 227 Step 2: Doing an External Analysis 227 Step 3: Doing an Internal Analysis 228 Step 4: Formulating Strategies 228 Step 5: Implementing Strategies Step 6: Evaluating Results 228 Corporate Strategies 228 What Is Corporate Strategy? 228 228 What Are the Types of Corporate Strategy? 229 How Are Corporate Strategies Managed? Competitive Strategies 230 231 The Role of Competitive Advantage Choosing a Competitive Strategy 231 233 Current Strategic Management Issues The Need for Strategic Leadership The Need for Strategic Flexibility 234 235 236 Important Organizational Strategies for Today’s Environment 236 CONTENTS Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 224 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Ursula Burns BY THE NUMBERS 234 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 239 230 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 242 Case Application 1: Gaga Over Gaga Case Application 2: Faded Signal Module Planning Tools and Techniques 244 246 248 Techniques for Assessing the Environment Environmental Scanning Forecasting 248 248 249 Benchmarking 251 Techniques for Allocating Resources Budgeting 252 Scheduling 253 Breakeven Analysis 256 Linear Programming 257 Contemporary Planning Techniques Project Management Scenario Planning Part IV 240 241 251 258 258 259 Organizing Chapter 10 Basic Organizational Design 262 Designing Organizational Structure 264 Work Specialization 265 Departmentalization 265 Chain of Command 268 Span of Control 271 Centralization and Decentralization Formalization 272 273 Mechanistic and Organic Structures 273 Contingency Factors Affecting Structural Choice 274 Strategy and Structure 275 Size and Structure 275 Technology and Structure 275 Environmental Uncertainty and Structure 276 Traditional Organizational Designs 277 Simple Structure 277 Functional Structure 278 Divisional Structure 278 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 264 BY THE NUMBERS 273 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Andrea Jung My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 279 276 xv xvi CONTENTS Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 280 281 281 Case Application 1: Ask Chuck 283 Case Application 2: A New Kind of Structure Chapter 11 Adaptive Organizational Design 286 Contemporary Organizational Designs Team Structures 284 288 289 Matrix and Project Structures 290 The Boundaryless Organization Learning Organizations 290 292 Organizing for Collaboration 293 Internal Collaboration 294 External Collaboration 295 Flexible Work Arrangements Telecommuting 297 297 Compressed Workweeks, Flextime, and Job Sharing Contingent Workforce 298 299 Today’s Organizational Design Challenges Keeping Employees Connected 300 300 Managing Global Structural Issues 301 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 288 FUTURE VISION | The Working World in 2020 292 BY THE NUMBERS 297 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | John T. Chambers 301 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 302 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 303 304 304 Case Application 1: In the Driver’s Seat 307 Case Application 2: The Virus Hunters 308 Chapter 12 Managing Human Resources 310 The Human Resource Management Process Why Is HRM Important? 312 External Factors That Affect the HRM Process 313 Identifying and Selecting Competent Employees 318 Human Resource Planning 318 Recruitment and Decruitment Selection 319 321 Providing Employees with Needed Skills and Knowledge 323 Orientation 323 Employee Training 324 Retaining Competent, High-Performing Employees 326 Employee Performance Management Compensation and Benefits 326 326 312 CONTENTS Contemporary Issues in Managing Human Resources 328 Managing Downsizing 328 Managing Sexual Harassment 329 Managing Work–Life Balance 330 Controlling HR Costs 332 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 312 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Lisa Brummel 317 BY THE NUMBERS 324 FUTURE VISION | The Working World in 2020 331 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 333 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 334 335 336 Case Application 1: Thinking Outside the Box 338 Case Application 2: Social Connections Module Managing Your Career 340 Career Opportunities in Management Finding a Culture That Fits Taking Risks 339 340 340 341 Reinventing Yourself 341 Learning to Get Along with Difficult People What Do I Want from My Job? 341 342 How Can I Have a Successful Career? 342 Chapter 13 Managing Teams 344 Groups and Group Development What Is a Group? 346 346 Stages of Group Development 346 Work Group Performance and Satisfaction External Conditions Imposed on the Group 348 348 Group Member Resources 349 Group Structure 349 Group Tasks 356 Turning Groups into Effective Teams 357 What Is a Work Team? 357 Types of Work Teams 358 Creating Effective Work Teams 359 Current Challenges in Managing Teams Managing Global Teams Building Team Skills 361 363 Understanding Social Networks 363 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 346 BY THE NUMBERS 349 FUTURE VISION | The Working World in 2020 356 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Marissa Mayer 361 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 364 361 xvii xviii CONTENTS Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 365 366 366 Case Application 1: Aiming Higher 368 Case Application 2: Making Order Out of Chaos 369 Part V Leading Chapter 14 Understanding Individual Behavior 370 Focus and Goals of Organizational Behavior Focus of Organizational Behavior 372 Goals of Organizational Behavior 373 Attitudes and Job Performance Job Satisfaction 372 374 377 Job Involvement and Organizational Commitment Employee Engagement 377 377 Attitudes and Consistency 378 Cognitive Dissonance Theory 379 Attitude Surveys 379 Implications for Managers 380 Personality 380 MBTI® 381 The Big Five Model 382 Additional Personality Insights 382 Personality Types in Different Cultures 384 Emotions and Emotional Intelligence 385 Implications for Managers 386 Perception 387 Factors That Influence Perception 387 Attribution Theory 388 Shortcuts Used in Judging Others 389 Implications for Managers 390 Learning 390 Operant Conditioning Social Learning 390 391 Shaping: A Managerial Tool 391 Implications for Managers 392 Contemporary Issues in Organizational Behavior 392 Managing Generational Differences 392 Managing Negative Behavior in the Workplace 394 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 372 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Chew Choon Seng 380 BY THE NUMBERS 383 FUTURE VISION | The Working World in 2020 385 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 395 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 398 397 396 CONTENTS Case Application 1: Understanding HCLites: Part 2 400 Case Application 2: Odd Couples Chapter 15 Managers and Communication 401 402 The Nature and Function of Communication What Is Communication? 404 404 Functions of Communication 405 Methods of Interpersonal Communication Effective Interpersonal Communication 406 409 Barriers to Communication 409 Overcoming the Barriers 410 Organizational Communication 412 Formal Versus Informal Communication 412 Direction of Communication Flow 412 Organizational Communication Networks Workplace Design and Communication 413 414 Information Technology and Communication How Technology Affects Managerial Communication How Information Technology Affects Organizations 416 416 417 Communication Issues in Today’s Organizations 417 Managing Communication in an Internet World 417 Managing the Organization’s Knowledge Resources The Role of Communication in Customer Service Getting Employee Input 420 Communicating Ethically 420 418 419 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 404 | Steve Jobs 407 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE FUTURE VISION | The Working World in 2020 416 BY THE NUMBERS 418 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 421 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions 423 Preparing for: My Career 424 Case Application 1: Gossip Girls 425 Case Application 2: Delivery Disaster Chapter 16 Motivating Employees What Is Motivation? 422 426 428 430 Early Theories of Motivation 431 Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Theory 431 McGregor’s Theory X and Theory Y 432 Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory 433 Three-Needs Theory 434 Contemporary Theories of Motivation Goal-Setting Theory 435 Reinforcement Theory 437 Designing Motivating Jobs Equity Theory 441 438 435 xix xx CONTENTS Expectancy Theory 442 Integrating Contemporary Theories of Motivation Current Issues in Motivation 443 445 Motivating in Tough Economic Circumstances 445 Managing Cross-Cultural Motivational Challenges 445 Motivating Unique Groups of Workers 447 Designing Appropriate Rewards Programs 449 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 430 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | John Goodnight 436 FUTURE VISION | The Working World in 2020 447 BY THE NUMBERS 449 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 451 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 452 453 453 Case Application 1: Searching For? 455 Case Application 2: Best Practices at Best Buy Chapter 17 Managers as Leaders 458 Who Are Leaders and What Is Leadership? Early Leadership Theories Leadership Trait Theories 460 460 461 Leadership Behavior Theories 462 Contingency Theories of Leadership The Fiedler Model 456 464 464 Hersey and Blanchard’s Situational Leadership Theory 466 Path-Goal Model 467 Contemporary Views of Leadership 469 Leader–Member Exchange (LMX) Theory 469 Transformational-Transactional Leadership 469 Charismatic-Visionary Leadership 470 Team Leadership 471 Leadership Issues in The Twenty-First Century Managing Power 472 Developing Trust 473 Empowering Employees 472 474 Leading Across Cultures 475 Becoming an Effective Leader 476 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 460 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Ajay Banga BY THE NUMBERS 471 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 477 469 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 478 479 479 Case Application 1: Growing Leaders 482 Case Application 2: Master and Commander 483 CONTENTS Part VI Controlling Chapter 18 Introduction to Controlling 484 What Is Controlling and Why Is It Important? The Control Process 486 488 Step 1. Measuring Actual Performance 488 Step 2. Comparing Actual Performance Against the Standard 489 Step 3. Taking Managerial Action 490 Managerial Decisions in Controlling 491 Controlling for Organizational Performance What Is Organizational Performance? 491 492 Measures of Organizational Performance 492 Tools for Measuring Organizational Performance 493 Feedforward/Concurrent/Feedback Controls 494 Financial Controls 495 Balanced Scorecard 496 Information Controls 497 Benchmarking of Best Practices 498 Contemporary Issues in Control 499 Adjusting Controls for Cross-Cultural Differences 499 Workplace Concerns 499 Workplace Violence 501 Controlling Customer Interactions Corporate Governance 503 504 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 486 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Bob Iger 498 BY THE NUMBERS 500 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 506 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 507 508 508 Case Application 1: Deepwater in Deep Trouble Case Application 2: Baggage Blunders Chapter 19 Managing Operations 514 The Role of Operations Management Services and Manufacturing Managing Productivity 511 516 517 517 Strategic Role of Operations Management 518 What Is Value Chain Management and Why Is It Important? 519 What Is Value Chain Management? 519 Goal of Value Chain Management 520 Benefits of Value Chain Management 520 Managing Operations Using Value Chain Management 521 Value Chain Strategy 521 Obstacles to Value Chain Management 524 510 xxi xxii CONTENTS Current Issues in Managing Operations Technology’s Role in Operations Management Quality Initiatives Quality Goals 526 526 527 528 Mass Customization and Lean Organization 529 Boxed Features A Manager’s Dilemma 516 LEADER WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE | Muhtar Kent BY THE NUMBERS 525 My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma 530 519 Chapter Summary by Learning Outcomes Review and Discussion Questions Preparing for: My Career 532 532 Case Application 1: Stirring Things Up Case Application 2: Smooth Ride Appendix 534 535 Managing Entrepreneurial Ventures 537 The Context of Entrepreneurship 537 What Is Entrepreneurship? 531 537 Why Is Entrepreneurship Important? The Entrepreneurial Process 538 What Do Entrepreneurs Do? 539 538 Social Responsibility and Ethics Issues Facing Entrepreneurs 539 Start-Up and Planning Issues 540 Identifying Environmental Opportunities and Competitive Advantage 540 Researching the Venture’s Feasibility—Generating and Evaluating Ideas 543 Researching the Venture’s Feasibility—Competitors 544 Researching the Venture’s Feasibility—Financing 545 Planning the Venture—Developing a Business Plan 546 Organizing Issues 547 Legal Forms of Organization 547 Organizational Design and Structure 550 Human Resource Management Issues in Entrepreneurial Ventures 550 Stimulating and Making Changes 551 The Importance of Continuing Innovation Leading Issues 552 552 Personality Characteristics of Entrepreneurs 552 Motivating Employees Through Empowerment The Entrepreneur as Leader Controlling Issues Managing Growth 553 554 555 555 Managing Downturns 557 Exiting the Venture 558 Managing Personal Life Choices and Challenges Endnotes 561 Name Index 607 Organization Index Glindex 628 Photo Credits 643 624 558 Y ou’ve made a good decision! You’re taking a college course ... maybe more than one. Although you may sometimes feel like you’re wasting your time being in college, you’re not. Yes, it’s expensive. Yes, it’s even sometimes hard. But what you’re doing now will pay off in the long run. In a recent survey of job seekers, a whopping 92 percent said that a major disadvantage in competing for jobs was not having taken college courses. But that’s not what you’ll face because you are enrolled in a college course—the course for which you’ve purchased this book. Key Changes to the 11th Edition Here are some of the main changes we’ve made in the 11th edition: Two new chapters: Managing Diversity and Adaptive Organizational Design Two case applications in each chapter New Leader Who Made a Difference in each chapter New By the Numbers in each chapter New Future Vision: The Working World in 2020 in 9 chapters New A Manager’s Dilemma in each chapter 43 percent of the endnotes have been updated with references from 2009 and 2010 New videos—up-to-date videos showing management topics in action, and access to the complete management video library, are available at www.mymanagementlab.com. Visit there to gain access and learn more. What This Course Is About and Why It’s Important This course and this book are about management and managers. Managers are the one thing that all organizations—no matter the size, kind, or location—need. And there’s no doubt that the world managers face has changed, is changing, and will continue to change. The dynamic nature of today’s organizations means both rewards and challenges for the individuals who will be managing those organizations. Management is a dynamic subject, and a textbook on it should reflect those changes to help prepare you to manage under the current conditions. We’ve written this 11th edition of Management to provide you with the best possible understanding of what it means to be a manager confronting change. Our Approach Our approach to management is simple: Management is about people. Managers manage people. Thus, we introduce you to real managers, real people who manage people. We’ve talked with these real managers and asked them to share their experiences with you. You get to see what being a manager is all about—the problems these real managers have faced and how they have resolved those problems. Not only do you have the benefit of your professor’s wisdom and knowledge, you also have access to your very own team of advisors and mentors. What’s Expected of You in This Course It’s simple. Come to class. Read the book. Do your assignments. And . . . study for your exams. If you want to get the most out of the money you’ve spent for this course and this textbook, that’s what you need to do. In addition to writing this book, we have taught management classes. And that’s what we expected of our students. xxiii xxiv PREFACE User’s Guide Your management course may be described as a “survey” course because a lot of topics are covered very quickly, and none of the topics are covered in great depth. It can be overwhelming at times! Your classroom professor is your primary source of information and will provide you with an outline of what you’re expected to do during the course. That’s also the person who will be evaluating your work and assigning you a grade, so pay attention to what is expected of you! View us, your textbook authors, as your supplementary professors. As your partners in this endeavor, we’ve provided you the best information possible both in the textbook and in the materials on mymanagementlab.com to help you succeed in this course. Now it’s up to you to use them! Getting the Most Out of Your Textbook: Getting a Good Grade in This Course Professors use a textbook because it provides a compact source of information that you need to know about the course’s subject material. Professors like this particular textbook because it presents management from the perspective of the people who actually do management—real managers. So take advantage of that and read what these real managers have to say. See how they’ve handled managerial problems. Learn about their management styles and think about how you might manage. In addition to what you can learn from these real managers, we provide several ways to help you get a good grade in this course. Use the review and discussion questions at the end of the chapter. They provide a great way to see if you understand the material you’ve just read. Also, use the materials on mymanagementlab. Mymanagementlab is a powerful online tool that combines assessment, reporting, and personalized study to help you succeed. Mymanagementlab gives you the opportunity to test yourself on key concepts and skills, track your own progress through the course, and use the personalized study plan activities—all to help achieve success in the classroom. Finally, we include a wide variety of useful learning experiences both in the textbook and on mymanagementlab. From ethical dilemmas and skill-building exercises to case analyses and hands-on management tasks, we’ve provided a lot of things to make your management course fun and worthwhile. Your professor will tell you what assignments you will be expected to do. But you don’t need to limit your learning experiences to those. Try out some of the other activities, even if they aren’t assigned. We know you won’t be disappointed! Student Supplements CourseSmart eTextbook CourseSmart is an exciting new choice for students looking to save money. As an alternative to purchasing the print textbook, you can purchase an electronic version of the same content. With a CourseSmart etextbook, you can search the text, make notes online, print out reading assignments that incorporate lecture notes, and bookmark important passages for later review. For more information, or to purchase access to the CourseSmart eTextbook, visit www.coursesmart.com. Mymanagementlab (www.mymanagementlab.com) is an easy to use online tool that personalizes course content and provides robust assessment and reporting to measure individual and class performance. All of the resources that students need for course success are in one place—flexible and easily adapted for your course experience. Some of the resources include an eText version of all chapters, quizzes, video clips, simulations, assessments, and PowerPoint presentations that engage students while helping them study independently. PREFACE Self-Assessment Library (S.A.L.) If you are interested in additional self-assessments, this valuable tool includes 67 individual self-assessment exercises that allow you to assess your knowledge, beliefs, feelings, and actions in regard to a wide range of personal skills, abilities, and interests. Provided scoring keys allow for immediate, individual analysis. S.A.L. is available as a printed workbook, a CD-ROM, and by an access code, so you have a choice of how you want to complete the assessments. S.A.L. ISBN 0-13-608376-5. xxv This page intentionally left blank Every author relies on the comments of reviewers and ours have been very helpful. We want to thank the following people for their insightful comments and suggestions for the 11th edition and previous editions of Management: Suhail Abboushi, Duquesne State Cheryl Adkins, Longwood College Aline Arnold, Eastern Illinois University Joseph Atallah, DeVry Institute of Technology Jayanta Bandyopadhyay, Central Michigan University Robb Bay, Community College of Southern Nevada Henry C. Bohleke, San Juan College Ernest Bourgeois, Castleton State College Jenell Bramlage, University of Northwestern Ohio Jacqueline H. Bull, Immaculata University James F. Cashman, The University of Alabama Rick Castaldi, San Francisco State University Bobbie Chan, Open University of Hong Kong Jim Chimenti, Jamestown Community College Jay Christensen-Szalanski, University of Iowa Thomas Clark, Xavier University Sharon Clinebell, University of Northern Colorado Daniel Cochran, Mississippi State University Augustus B. Colangelo, Penn State Jason Coleman, Wesley College Donald Conlon, University of Delaware Roy Cook, Fort Lewis College Anne C. Cowden, California State University, Sacramento Claudia Daumer, California State University, Chico Kristl Davison, University of Mississippi Thomas Deckleman, Owens Community College R. Dortch, Austin Peay State University Mary Ann Edwards, College of Mount St. Joseph Tan Eng, Ngee Ann Polytechnic Allen D. Engle, Sr., Eastern Kentucky University Judson C. Faurer, Metro State College Dale M. Feinauer, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh Janice Feldbauer, Austin Community College Diane L. Ferry, University of Delaware Louis Firenze, Northwood University Bruce Fischer, Elmhurst College Phillip Flamm, Angelo State University Robert Foley, College of St. Joseph Barbara Foltz, Clemson University June Freund, Pittsburgh State University Michele Fritz, DeAnza College Charles V. Goodman, Texas A&M University H. Gregg Hamby, University of Houston Frank Hamilton, University of South Florida Robert W. Hanna, California State University, Northridge James C. Hayton, Utah State University Wei He, Indiana State University Phyllis G. Holland, Valdosta State College Phil Holleran, Mitchell Community College Henry Jackson, Delaware County Community College Matrecia James, Jacksonville University Jim Jones, University of Nebraska, Omaha Kathleen Jones, University of North Dakota Marvin Karlins, University of South Florida Andy Kein, Keller Graduate School of Management David Kennedy, Berkeley School of Business Russell Kent, Georgia Southern University William H. Kirchman, Fayetteville Technical Community College John L. Kmetz, University of Delaware Gary Kohut, University of North Carolina at Charlotte xxvii xxviii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS William Laing, Anderson College Gary M. Lande, Montana State University Ellis L. Langston, Texas Tech University Les Ledger, Central Texas College David Linthicum, Cecil College W. L. Loh, Mohawk Valley Community College Susan D. Looney, Delaware Technical and Community College James Mazza, Middlesex Community College Lisa McCormick, Community College of Allegheny James McElroy, Iowa State University Carrie Blair Messal, College of Charleston Joseph F. Michlitsch, Southern Illinois University–Edwardsville Sandy J. Miles, Murray State University Lavelle Mills, West Texas A&M University Corey Moore, Angelo State University Rick Moron, University of California, Berkeley Don C. Mosley, Jr., University of South Alabama Anne M. O’Leary-Kelly, Texas A&M University Rhonda Palladi, Georgia State University Shelia Pechinski, University of Maine Victor Preisser, Golden Gate University Michelle Reavis, University of Alabama, Huntsville Clint Relyea, Arkansas State University, University of Arkansas James Robinson, The College of New Jersey Patrick Rogers, North Carolina A&T University James Salvucci, Curry College Elliot M. Ser, Barry University Tracy Huneycutt Sigler, Western Washington University Eva Smith, Spartanburg Technical College James Spee, The Claremont Graduate School Roger R. Stanton, California State University Dena M. Stephenson, Calhoun Community College Charles Stubbart, Southern Illinois University Ram Subramanian, Grand Valley State University Thomas G. Thompson, University of Maryland, University College Frank Tomassi, Johnson & Wales University Isaiah O. Ugboro, North Carolina A&T State University Philip M. VanAuken, Baylor University Carolyn Waits, Cincinnati State University Bill Walsh, University of Illinois Richard C. Warner, Lehigh Carbon Community College Emilia S. Westney, Texas Tech University Gary L. Whaley, Norfolk State University Bobbie Williams, Georgia Southern University Lucia Worthington, University of Maryland University College Wendy Wysocki, Monroe Community College Our team at Prentice Hall has been amazing to work with! This team of editors, production experts, technology gurus, designers, marketing specialists, sales representatives, and warehouse employees works hard to turn our digital files into a bound textbook and to see that it gets to faculty and students. We couldn’t do this without all of you! Our sincere thanks to the people who made this book “go” include Kim Norbuta, Nikki Jones, Judy Leale, Claudia Fernandes, Ian Gold, Kathie Foot, Sally Yagan, Nancy Moudry, Sharon Anderson, Suzanne DeWorken, and Cheryl Wilms. A special thank you goes to Anita Looney who worked very hard to coordinate all the materials and responses from our “real” managers. Anita, you were great, as always! And simple words can’t express how much we appreciate those “real” managers who so graciously gave their time to help us put together a textbook that is like no other on the market. Without their contributions, our belief in showing managers as real people would be hard to do. Thank you, thank you, thank you! Mary would also like to thank her department head, Barry Wisdom; and her departmental secretary, Carol Hale, for all their support and encouragement. Finally, Steve would like to thank his wife, Laura, for her encouragement and support. Mary would like to thank her husband and family for being supportive and understanding and for patiently enduring her many hours at the computer! Management ELEVENTH EDITION 1 chapter Let’s Get Real: Meet the Manager Lacy Martin Banking Center Manager Assistant Vice President Commerce Bank Springfield, MO MY JOB: You’ll be hearing more from this real manager throughout the chapter. I’m a branch manager for Commerce Bank. I manage a team of individuals who help our customers with solutions to meet all their financial needs. BEST PART OF MY JOB: Watching my employees become successful top performers and grow their careers within the company. Management and Organizations 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Explain why managers are important to organizations. page 4 Tell who managers are and where they work. page 5 Describe the functions, roles, and skills of managers. page 8 Describe the factors that are reshaping and redefining the manager’s job. page 13 Explain the value of studying management. page 17 LEARNING OUTCOMES WORST PART OF MY JOB: Customers who have had circumstances and decisions that have resulted in putting them in a dire financial state. BEST MANAGEMENT ADVICE EVER RECEIVED: A discussion about the importance of open and clear communication that was tied to the famous quote from the 1967 film Cool Hand Luke, “What we’ve got here is a failure to communicate.” 3 A Manager’s Dilemma 12.7 million. That’s the total number of That someone is a manager. Lisa Greene is one such people employed in the restaurant in- manager. As the general manager of a popular and dustry according to the National very busy restaurant in Springfield, Missouri, she over- Restaurant Association.1 Those em- sees 100 employees. Working long hours, Lisa is ex- ployees hold jobs ranging from greet- pected to lead her team and uphold the company’s ing and serving customers to cooking high standards so employees can do their assigned for and cleaning up after customers. work efficiently and effectively. Like any hard-working There’s a lot of action taking place in manager, Lisa is continually trying to find ways to cut a restaurant—sometimes calm and costs and make her restaurant run a little more sometimes frenetic—as employees smoothly. But her most important challenge comes work together to provide customers from looking for ways to make her restaurant a better what they want. And overseeing those place to work. Put yourself in Lisa’s place. employees is someone who must ensure that everything runs smoothly. What Would You Do? Like many students, maybe you’ve worked in the restaurant industry at some time or another. It’s not an easy job. It can be hot, dirty, and exhausting. Customers can be rude and demanding. And your work experiences, whether in a restaurant or in some other workplace, are likely to have been influenced by the skills and abilities of your manager. Lisa is a good example of what today’s successful managers are like and the skills they must have in dealing with the problems and challenges of managing in the twenty-first century. This book is about the important managerial work that Lisa and the millions of other managers like her do. The reality facing today’s managers is that the world has changed. In workplaces of all types—restaurants, offices, retail stores, factories, and the like—managers must deal with changing expectations and new ways of managing employees and organizing work. In this chapter, we introduce you to managers and management by looking at why managers are important, who managers are and where they work, and what managers do. Finally, we wrap up the chapter by looking at the factors reshaping and redefining the manager’s job and discussing why it’s important to study management. LEARNING OUTCOME Explain why managers are important to organizations. 4 1.1 Why Are Managers Important? “ . . . A great boss can change your life, inspiring you to new heights both professionally and personally, and energizing you and your team to together overcome new challenges bigger than any one of you could tackle alone.”2 If you’ve had the opportunity to work with a manager like this, count yourself lucky. Such a manager can make a job a lot more enjoyable and productive. However, even managers who don’t live up to such lofty ideals and expectations are important to organizations. Let’s look at three reasons why. The first reason managers are important is that organizations need their managerial skills and abilities more than ever in these uncertain, complex, and chaotic times. As organizations deal with today’s challenges—the worldwide economic climate, changing technology, everincreasing globalization, and so forth—managers play an important role in identifying critical issues and crafting responses. For example, John Zapp, general manager of several car dealerships in Oklahoma City, has struggled to keep his businesses afloat and profitable in the current economic environment, just as many other car dealers have.3 However, after four decades in the car business, Zapp understands that he’s the one calling the shots and his “call” right now is to focus on selling more used cars. How? By keeping inventory moving and by keeping his salespeople engaged through small cash payment rewards for hitting sales goals. His skills and abilities as a manager have been crucial in guiding his organization through these challenging times. Another reason managers are important to organizations is that they’re critical to getting things done. For instance, in our chapter-opening story, Lisa wasn’t the person greeting and CHAPTER 1 | MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS 5 seating customers, taking their orders, cooking their meals, or preparing a table for another customer, but she was the person who creates and coordinates the workplace systems and conditions so that others can perform those tasks. Although she often pitches in when and where needed, her job as manager is to ensure that all the employees are getting their jobs done so the organization can do what it’s in business to do. If work isn’t getting done or isn’t getting done as it should be, she’s also the one who must find out why and get things back on track. Finally, managers do matter to organizations! How do we know that? The Gallup Organization, which has polled millions of employees and tens of thousands of managers, has found that the single most important variable in employee productivity and loyalty isn’t pay or benefits or workplace environment; it’s the quality of the relationship between employees and their direct supervisors.4 In addition, global consulting firm Towers Watson found that the way a company manages and engages its people can significantly affect its financial performance.5 Also, a recent study of organizational performance found that managerial ability was important in creating organizational value.6 What can we conclude from such reports? That managers are important and they do matter! Who Are Managers and Where 1.2 Do They Work? Managers may not be who or what you might expect! Managers can be under the age of 18 to over age 80. They run large corporations as well as entrepreneurial start-ups. They’re found in government departments, hospitals, small businesses, not-for-profit agencies, museums, schools, and even such nontraditional organizations as political campaigns and music tours. Managers can also be found doing managerial work in every country on the globe. In addition, some managers are top-level managers while others are first-line managers. And today, managers are just as likely to be women as they are men. However, the number of women in top-level manager positions remains low—only 27 women were CEOs of major U.S. corporations in 2010.8 But no matter where managers are found or what gender they are, the fact is . . . managers have exciting and challenging jobs! Who Is a Manager? It used to be fairly simple to define who managers were: They were the organizational members who told others what to do and how to do it. It was easy to differentiate managers from nonmanagerial employees. Now, it isn’t quite that simple. In many organizations, the changing nature of work has blurred the distinction between managers and nonmanagerial employees. Many traditional nonmanagerial jobs now include managerial activities.9 For example, at General Cable Corporation’s facility in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, Canada, managerial responsibilities are shared by managers and team members. Most of the employees at Moose Jaw are cross-trained and multi-skilled. Within a single shift, an employee can be a team leader, equipment operator, maintenance technician, quality inspector, or improvement planner.10 So, how do we define who managers are? A manager is someone who coordinates and oversees the work of other people so that organizational goals can be accomplished. A manager’s job is not about personal achievement—it’s about helping others do their work. That may mean coordinating the work of a departmental group, or it might mean supervising a single person. It could involve coordinating the work activities of a team with people from different departments or even people outside the organization, such as temporary employees or individuals who work for the organization’s suppliers. Keep in mind, also, that 7 by the numbers 8 percent of job applicants say that a good rapport with the manager is most important when considering a new employer. 42 #1 28 51 52 3 percent of individuals ages 18–34 say they do not want to become a manager. 35 percent of employees who have quit their jobs say it’s because of unhappiness with management. 30 percent of white-collar workers think incompetence is what makes for a bad boss. manager Someone who coordinates and oversees the work of other people so that organizational goals can be accomplished LEARNING OUTCOME Tell who managers are and where they work. – the rank of people skills as the most valued skill in job applicants. percent of people would lay off/fire their boss if given the option. percent of workers say they do not have qualified managers. percent of workers say their boss is likable. times—when managers are disengaged from their work, their employees are 3 times as likely to be disengaged from their work. 6 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT As brand manager with Little Kids, Inc., Kate Boehnert is a middle manager responsible for the quality and successful promotion of the company’s line of bubble toys. In this photo, she demonstrates during a toy trade show how the motorized Bubble Light blows bubbles. Brand managers work with product developers, salespeople, copywriters, and advertising directors to coordinate the production, distribution, and marketing of their product line. They analyze sales figures, set prices, organize advertising campaigns, explore different marketing strategies, and contact retailers to convince them to carry their brands. Successful brand managers may advance to a top management position. managers may have work duties not related to coordinating and overseeing others’ work. For example, an insurance claims supervisor might process claims in addition to coordinating the work activities of other claims clerks. Is there a way to classify managers in organizations? In traditionally structured organizations (which are often pictured as a pyramid because more employees are at lower organizational levels than at upper organizational levels), managers can be classified as first-line, middle, or top. (See Exhibit 1-1.) At the lowest level of management, first-line managers manage the work of nonmanagerial employees who typically are involved with producing the organization’s products or servicing the organization’s customers. First-line managers may be called supervisors or even shift managers, district managers, department managers, or office managers. Middle managers manage the work of first-line managers and can be found between the lowest and top levels of the organization. They may have titles such as regional manager, project leader, store manager, or division manager. In our chapter-opening dilemma, Lisa is a middle manager. As the general manager, she’s responsible for how her restaurant performs, but also is one of about 60 general managers company-wide who report to someone at corporate headquarters. At the upper levels of the organization are the top managers, who are responsible for making organization-wide decisions and establishing the plans and goals that affect the entire organization. These individuals typically have titles such as executive vice president, president, managing director, chief operating officer, or chief executive officer. Not all organizations get work done with a traditional pyramidal form, however. Some organizations, for example, are more loosely configured with work being done by ever-changing teams of employees who move from one project to another as work demands arise. Although it’s not as easy to tell who the managers are in these organizations, we do know that someone must fulfill that role—that is, there must be someone who coordinates and oversees the work of others, even if that “someone” changes as work tasks or projects change. Where Do Managers Work? It’s obvious that managers do their work in organizations. But what is an organization? It’s a deliberate arrangement of people to accomplish some specific purpose. Your college or university is an organization; so are fraternities and sororities, government departments, churches, Facebook, your neighborhood grocery store, the United Way, the St. Louis Cardinals baseball team, and the Mayo Clinic. All are considered organizations and have three common characteristics. (See Exhibit 1-2.) First, an organization has a distinct purpose. This purpose is typically expressed through goals that the organization hopes to accomplish. Second, each organization is composed of people. It takes people to perform the work that’s necessary for the organization to achieve its goals. Third, all organizations develop some deliberate structure within which members EXHIBIT 1-1 Levels of Management Top Managers Middle Managers First-Line Managers Nonmanagerial Employees CHAPTER 1 | MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS EXHIBIT 1-2 Characteristics of Organizations Distinct Purpose Deliberate Structure People do their work. That structure may be open and flexible, with no specific job duties or strict adherence to explicit job arrangements. For instance, at Google, most big projects, of which there are hundreds going on at the same time, are tackled by small focused employee teams that set up in an instant and complete work just as quickly.11 Or the structure may be more traditional—like that of Procter & Gamble or General Electric—with clearly defined rules, regulations, job descriptions, and some members identified as “bosses” who have authority over other members. Many of today’s organizations are structured more like Google, with flexible work arrangements, employee work teams, open communication systems, and supplier alliances. In these organizations, work is defined in terms of tasks to be done. And workdays have no time boundaries since work can—and is—done anywhere, anytime. The Working World in 2020 noted inventor once said, “My interest is managerial practices are likely to have changed since the early 1990s, it appears that the A in the future because I’m going to spend because they’ve become irrelevant or even “tipping point” has been reached. Although this the rest of my life there.”12 While this obsolete. event has numerous societal implications, book presents a fairly accurate description of In 2000, Malcolm Gladwell’s popular book we’re more interested in the implications for today’s workplace, you’re going to spend most The Tipping Point looked at how major changes the work world that you’ll be part of. Implica- of your worklife in the future. What will that in our society occur. (Even at more than 10 years tions such as: What will employee hiring worklife look like? How will it be different from old, it’s an interesting read and we recommend and selection processes be like? How will today? it!) Many demographers have said that 2010 employee training programs change? How Although no one has a perfectly accurate could be a tipping point for the composition of will employee reward programs be set up? Who window to the future, certain trends in place the U.S. population. That’s the year it’s pre- will become the role models and business leadtoday offer insights into what tomorrow holds. dicted that “the number of babies born to ers that guide and shape our businesses? We We can extrapolate from those trends to sneak minorities outnumbers that of babies born to will look at these types of issues in our Future a peek at the future. We’ve arbitrarily chosen to whites.” This is yet another trend indicator in Vision boxes located in various chapters. So focus on the year 2020 because it’s close which minorities are expected to become the strap on your visionary goggles and enjoy this enough that most of you will be actively in the U.S. majority over the next 40 years. Although intriguing look at the future! After all, you’re workforce, yet far enough away that current this demographic shift has been documented going to be spending the rest of your life there! first-line managers top managers organization Managers at the lowest level of management who manage the work of nonmanagerial employees Managers at or near the upper levels of the organization structure who are responsible for making organization-wide decisions and establishing the goals and plans that affect the entire organization A deliberate arrangement of people to accomplish some specific purpose middle managers Managers between the lowest level and top levels of the organization who manage the work of first-line managers 7 8 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT However, no matter what type of approach an organization uses, some deliberate structure is needed so work can get done, with managers overseeing and coordinating that work. LEARNING OUTCOME Describe the functions, roles, and skills of managers. 1.3 Efficiency is important in my job because customers expect us to be efficient and accurate when conducting their business and it is always important to deliver on the customer’s expectation. What Do Managers Do? Simply speaking, management is what managers do. But that simple statement doesn’t tell us much, does it? Let’s look first at what management is before discussing more specifically what managers do. Management involves coordinating and overseeing the work activities of others so that their activities are completed efficiently and effectively. We already know that coordinating and overseeing the work of others is what distinguishes a managerial position from a nonmanagerial one. However, this doesn’t mean that managers can do what they want anytime, anywhere, or in any way. Instead, management involves ensuring that work activities are completed efficiently and effectively by the people responsible for doing them, or at least that’s what managers aspire to do. Efficiency refers to getting the most output from the least amount of inputs. Because managers deal with scarce inputs—including resources such as people, money, and equipment—they’re concerned with the efficient use of those resources. It’s often referred to as “doing things right”—that is, not wasting resources. For instance, at the HON Company plant in Cedartown, Georgia, where employees make and assemble office furniture, efficient manufacturing techniques were implemented by doing things such as cutting inventory levels, decreasing the amount of time to manufacture products, and lowering product reject rates. These efficient work practices paid off as the plant reduced costs by more than $7 million in one year.13 It’s not enough, however, just to be efficient. Management is also concerned with being effective, completing activities so that organizational goals are attained. Effectiveness is often described as “doing the right things”—that is, doing those work activities that will help the organization reach its goals. For instance, at the HON factory, goals included meeting customers’ rigorous demands, executing world-class manufacturing strategies, and making employee jobs easier and safer. Through various work initiatives, these goals were pursued and achieved. Whereas efficiency is concerned with the means of getting things done, effectiveness is concerned with the ends, or attainment of organizational goals (see Exhibit 1-3). In successful organizations, high efficiency and high effectiveness typically go hand in hand. Poor management (which leads to poor performance) usually involves being inefficient and ineffective or being effective, but inefficient. Now let’s take a more detailed look at what managers do. Describing what managers do isn’t easy. Just as no two organizations are alike, no two managers’ jobs are alike. In spite of this, management researchers have developed three approaches to describe what managers do: functions, roles, and skills. EXHIBIT 1-3 Efficiency and Effectiveness in Management Efficiency (Means) Effectiveness (Ends) Resource Usage Goal Attainment Low Waste High Attainment Management Strives for: Low Resource Waste (high efficiency) High Goal Attainment (high effectiveness) CHAPTER 1 | MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS Management Functions According to the functions approach, managers perform certain activities or functions as they efficiently and effectively coordinate the work of others. What are these functions? Henri Fayol, a French businessman, first proposed in the early part of the twentieth century that all managers perform five functions: planning, organizing, commanding, coordinating, and controlling.14 Today, these functions have been condensed to four: planning, organizing, leading, and controlling (see Exhibit 1-4). Let’s briefly look at each function. If you have no particular destination in mind, then any road will do. However, if you have someplace in particular you want to go, you’ve got to plan the best way to get there. Because organizations exist to achieve some particular purpose, someone must define that purpose and the means for its achievement. Managers are that someone. As managers engage in planning, they set goals, establish strategies for achieving those goals, and develop plans to integrate and coordinate activities. Managers are also responsible for arranging and structuring work to accomplish the organization’s goals. We call this function organizing. When managers organize, they determine what tasks are to be done, who is to do them, how the tasks are to be grouped, who reports to whom, and where decisions are to be made. Every organization has people, and a manager’s job is to work with and through people to accomplish goals. This is the leading function. When managers motivate subordinates, help resolve work group conflicts, influence individuals or teams as they work, select the most effective communication channel, or deal in any way with employee behavior issues, they’re leading. The final management function is controlling. After goals and plans are set (planning), tasks and structural arrangements put in place (organizing), and people hired, trained, and motivated (leading), there has to be some evaluation of whether things are going as planned. To ensure that goals are being met and that work is being done as it should be, managers must monitor and evaluate performance. Actual performance must be compared with the set goals. If those goals aren’t being achieved, it’s the manager’s job to get work back on track. This process of monitoring, comparing, and correcting is the controlling function. Just how well does the functions approach describe what managers do? Do managers always plan, organize, lead, and then control? In reality, what a manager does may not EXHIBIT 1-4 Planning Organizing Leading Controlling Setting goals, establishing strategies, and developing plans to coordinate activities Determining what needs to be done, how it will be done, and who is to do it Motivating, leading, and any other actions involved in dealing with people Monitoring activities to ensure that they are accomplished as planned Four Functions of Management Lead to Achieving the organization’s stated purposes management planning leading Coordinating and overseeing the work activities of others so that their activities are completed efficiently and effectively Management function that involves setting goals, establishing strategies for achieving those goals, and developing plans to integrate and coordinate activities Management function that involves working with and through people to accomplish organizational goals efficiency Doing things right, or getting the most output from the least amount of inputs effectiveness Doing the right things, or completing activities so that organizational goals are attained organizing Management function that involves arranging and structuring work to accomplish the organization’s goals controlling Management function that involves monitoring, comparing, and correcting work performance 9 10 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT Let’s Fly Together is the slogan of a merger undertaken by the top managers of United Airlines and Continental Airlines that will form the world’s largest airline. United’s CEO Glenn Tilton (left) and Continental’s CEO Jeff Smisek stated that the merger strategy will achieve the goals of creating a combined airline that is more efficient and better positioned as a strong global competitor, that has the financial strength needed to make investments in improved products and services, and that can achieve and sustain profitability. Plans for the combined airline include flying under the United name and using the logo and colors of Continental. always happen in this sequence. Regardless of the “order” in which these functions are performed, however, the fact is that managers do plan, organize, lead, and control as they manage. To illustrate, look back at the chapter-opening story. When Lisa is working to keep her employees motivated and engaged, that’s leading. As she makes out the week’s schedule, that’s planning. When she is trying to cut costs, those actions obviously involve controlling. And dealing with unhappy customers is likely to involve leading, controlling, and maybe even planning. Although the functions approach is popular for describing what managers do, some have argued that it isn’t relevant.15 So let’s look at another perspective. Mintzberg’s Managerial Roles and a Contemporary Model of Managing Henry Mintzberg, a well-known management researcher, studied actual managers at work. In his first comprehensive study, Mintzberg concluded that what managers do can best be described by looking at the managerial roles they engage in at work.16 The term managerial roles refers to specific actions or behaviors expected of and exhibited by a manager. (Think of the different roles you play—such as student, employee, student organization member, volunteer, sibling, and so forth—and the different things you’re expected to do in these roles.) When describing what managers do from a roles perspective, we’re not looking at a specific person per se, but at the expectations and responsibilities that are associated with being the person in that role—the role of a manager.17 As shown in Exhibit 1-5, these 10 roles are grouped around interpersonal relationships, the transfer of information, and decision making. The interpersonal roles are ones that involve people (subordinates and persons outside the organization) and other duties that are ceremonial and symbolic in nature. The three interpersonal roles include figurehead, leader, and liaison. The informational roles involve collecting, receiving, and disseminating information. The three informational roles include monitor, disseminator, and spokesperson. Finally, the decisional roles entail making decisions or choices. The four decisional roles include entrepreneur, disturbance handler, resource allocator, and negotiator. As managers perform these roles, Mintzberg proposed that their activities included both reflection (thinking) and action (doing).18 Our manager in the chapter opener would do both as she manages. For instance, reflection would occur when Lisa listens to employees’ or customers’ problems, while action would occur when she resolves those problems. CHAPTER 1 | MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS EXHIBIT 1-5 Mintzberg’s Managerial Roles Interpersonal Roles • Figurehead • Leader • Liaison Informational Roles • Monitor • Disseminator • Spokesperson Decisional Roles • Entrepreneur • Disturbance handler • Resource allocator • Negotiator Based on Mintzberg, Henry, The Nature of Managerial Work, 1st Edition, © 1980, pp. 93–94. A number of follow-up studies have tested the validity of Mintzberg’s role categories and the evidence generally supports the idea that managers—regardless of the type of organization or level in the organization—perform similar roles.19 However, the emphasis that managers give to the various roles seems to change with organizational level.20 At higher levels of the organization, the roles of disseminator, figurehead, negotiator, liaison, and spokesperson are more important; while the leader role (as Mintzberg defined it) is more important for lower-level managers than it is for either middle or toplevel managers. Recently, Mintzberg completed another hands-on and up-close study of managers at work and concluded that, “Basically, managing is about influencing action. It’s about helping organizations and units to get things done, which means action.”21 Based on his observations, Mintzberg went on to explain that a manager does this in three ways: (1) by managing actions directly (for instance, negotiating contracts, managing projects, etc.), (2) by managing people who take action (for example, motivating them, building teams, enhance the organization’s culture, etc.), or (3) by managing information that propels people to take action (using budgets, goals, task delegation, etc.). The manager at the center of the model has two roles—framing, which defines how a manager managerial roles informational roles Specific actions or behaviors expected of and exhibited by a manager Managerial roles that involve collecting, receiving, and disseminating information interpersonal roles decisional roles Managerial roles that involve people and other duties that are ceremonial and symbolic in nature Managerial roles that revolve around making choices 11 12 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT “You can’t expect people to do a good job at work if their lives are a mess.”23 That’s the philosophy of Panda Express founder and chairman, Andrew Cherng. Together with his wife Peggy, they have built a restaurant empire with more than 1,200 outlets and $1 billion in sales. They believe that a company is only as good as the employees who comprise it. In fact, he says that his company’s success doesn’t come just from the meals prepared in the kitchen, but because “he cares about the emotional well-being of his employees.” With five guiding values—being proactive, showing respect/- approaches his or her job; and scheduling, which “brings the frame to life” through the distinct tasks the manager does. A manager enacts these roles while managing action in the three “planes:” with information, through people, and sometimes by taking action directly. It’s an interesting perspective on the manager’s job and one that adds to our understanding of what it is that managers do. So which approach is better—managerial functions or Mintzberg’s propositions? Although each does a good job of depicting what managers do, the functions approach still seems to be the generally accepted way of describing the manager’s job. “The classical functions provide clear and discrete methods of classifying the thousands of activities that managers carry out and the techniques they use in terms of the functions they perform for the achievement of goals.”22 However, Mintzberg’s role approach and newly developed model of managing do offer us other insights into managers’ work. having a win-win attitude, pursuing growth, having great operations, and being giving—and a caring and strong management team, this company has prospered. What can you learn from this leader who made a difference? The skills good managers need include listening, communication skills, creativity, and a strong sense of teamwork. EXHIBIT 1-6 Skills Needed at Different Managerial Levels Management Skills Dell Inc. is a company that understands the importance of management skills.24 It started an intensive five-day offsite skills training program for first-line managers as a way to improve its operations. One of Dell’s directors of learning and development thought this was the best way to develop “leaders who can build that strong relationship with their front-line employees.” What have the supervisors learned from the skills training? Some things they mentioned were how to communicate more effectively and how to refrain from jumping to conclusions when discussing a problem with a worker. What types of skills do managers need? Robert L. Katz proposed that managers need three critical skills in managing: technical, human, and conceptual.25 (Exhibit 1-6 shows the relationships of these skills to managerial levels.) Technical skills are the jobspecific knowledge and techniques needed to proficiently perform work tasks. These skills tend to be more important for first-line managers because they typically are managing employees who use tools and techniques to produce the organization’s products or service the organization’s customers. Often, employees with excellent technical skills get promoted to first-line manager. For example, Mark Ryan of Verizon Communications manages almost 100 technicians who service half a million of the company’s customers. Before becoming a manager, however, Ryan was a telephone lineman. He says, “The technical side of the business is important, but managing people and rewarding and recognizing the people who do an outstanding job is how we (Verizon) are going to succeed.”26 Ryan is a manager who has technical skills, but also recognizes the importance of human skills, which involve the ability to work well with other people both individually and in a group. Because all managers deal with people, these skills are equally important to all levels of management. Managers with good human skills CHAPTER 1 | MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS 13 EXHIBIT 1-7 • • • • • • • • • Managing human capital Inspiring commitment Managing change Structuring work and getting things done Facilitating the psychological and social contexts of work Using purposeful networking Managing decision-making processes Managing strategy and innovation Managing logistics and technology Important Managerial Skills Based on “Dear Workforce: We’re Developing Onboarding for New Managers: What Should Be Included?” Workforce Online, March 4, 2010; J. R. Ryan, “The Coming Leadership Gap: What You Can Do About It,” Bloomberg BusinessWeek Online, December 15, 2009; In-Sue Oh and C. M. Berry, “The Five Factor Model of Personality and Managerial Performance: Validity Gains Through the Use of 360 Degree Performance Ratings,” Journal of Applied Psychology, November 2009, pp. 1498–1513; and R. S. Rubin and E. C. Dierdorff, “How Relevant Is the MBA? Assessing the Alignment of Required Curricula and Required Managerial Competencies,” Academy of Management Learning & Education, June 2009, pp. 208–224. get the best out of their people. They know how to communicate, motivate, lead, and inspire enthusiasm and trust. Finally, conceptual skills are the skills managers use to think and to conceptualize about abstract and complex situations. Using these skills, managers see the organization as a whole, understand the relationships among various subunits, and visualize how the organization fits into its broader environment. These skills are most important to top managers. Other important managerial skills that have been identified are listed in Exhibit 1-7. In today’s demanding and dynamic workplace, employees who want to be valuable assets must constantly upgrade their skills, and developing management skills can be particularly beneficial in today’s workplace. We feel that understanding and developing management skills is so important that we’ve included a skills feature at the end of each chapter. (The one in this chapter looks at developing your political skill.) In addition, you’ll find other material on skill building as well as several interactive skills exercises in our mymanagementlab. As you study the four management functions throughout the rest of the book, you’ll be able to start developing some key management skills. Although a simple skill-building exercise won’t make you an instant expert, it can provide you an introductory understanding of some of the skills you’ll need to master in order to be an effective manager. How Is the Manager’s Job Changing? 1.4 “At Best Buy’s headquarters, more than 60 percent of the 4,000 employees are now judged only on tasks or results. Salaried people put in as much time as it takes to do their work. Those employees report better relationships with family and friends, more company loyalty, and more focus and energy. Productivity has increased by 35 percent. Employees say they don’t know whether they work fewer hours—they’ve stopped counting. Perhaps more important, they’re finding new ways to become efficient.”27 Welcome to the new world of managing! In today’s world, managers are dealing with global economic and political uncertainties, changing workplaces, ethical issues, security threats, and changing technology. For example, LEARNING OUTCOME Describe the factors that are reshaping and redefining the manager’s job. technical skills human skills conceptual skills Job-specific knowledge and techniques needed to proficiently perform work tasks The ability to work well with other people individually and in a group The ability to think and to conceptualize about abstract and complex situations 14 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT Dave Maney, the top manager of Headwaters MB, a Denver-based investment bank, had to fashion a new game plan during the recession. When the company’s board of directors gave senior management complete freedom to ensure the company’s survival, they made a bold move. All but seven key employees were laid off. Although this doesn’t sound very responsible or resourceful, it invited those laid-off employees to form independent member firms. Now, Headwaters steers investment transactions to those firms, while keeping a small percentage for itself. The “restructuring drastically reduced fixed costs and also freed management to do more marketing, rather than day-to-day investment banking transactions.” As Maney said, “It was a good strategy for us and positioned us for the future.”28 It’s likely that more managers will have to manage under such demanding circumstances, and the fact is that how managers manage is changing. Exhibit 1-8 shows some of the most important changes facing managers. Throughout the rest of this book, we’ll be discussing these and other changes and how they’re affecting the way managers plan, organize, lead, and control. We want to highlight three of these changes: the increasing importance of customers, innovation, and sustainability. Importance of Customers to the Manager’s Job John Chambers, CEO of Cisco Systems, likes to listen to voice mails forwarded to him from dissatisfied customers. He says, “E-mail would be more efficient, but I want to hear the emotion, I want to hear the frustration, I want to hear the caller’s level of comfort EXHIBIT 1-8 Changes Facing Managers Change Changing Technology (Digitization) Increased Emphasis on Organizational and Managerial Ethics Impact of Change Shifting organizational boundaries Virtual workplaces More mobile workforce Flexible work arrangements Empowered employees Work life–personal life balance Redefined values Rebuilding trust Increased accountability Increased Competitiveness Customer service Innovation Globalization Efficiency/productivity Changing Security Threats Risk management Uncertainty over future energy sources/prices Restructured workplace Discrimination concerns Globalization concerns Employee assistance Uncertainty over economic climate CHAPTER 1 | MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS 15 with the strategy we’re employing. I can’t get that through e-mail.”29 This manager understands the importance of customers. You need customers. Without them, most organizations would cease to exist. Yet, focusing on the customer has long been thought to be the responsibility of marketing types. “Let the marketers worry about the customers” is how many managers felt. We’re discovering, however, that employee attitudes and behaviors play a big role in customer satisfaction. For instance, passengers of Qantas Airways were asked to rate their “essential needs” in air travel. Almost every factor listed was one directly influenced by the actions of company employees—from prompt baggage delivery, to courteous and efficient cabin crews, to assistance with connections, to quick and friendly check-ins.30 Today, the majority of employees in developed countries work in service jobs. For instance, some 77 percent of the U.S. labor force is employed in service industries. In Australia, 71 percent work in service industries. In the United Kingdom, Germany, and Japan the percentages are 75, 72, and 75, respectively. Even in developing countries like India and Russia, we find 63 percent and 58 percent of the labor force employed in service jobs.31 Examples of service jobs include technical support representatives, food servers or fast-food counter workers, sales clerks, teachers, nurses, computer repair technicians, front desk clerks, consultants, purchasing agents, credit representatives, financial planners, and bank tellers. The odds are pretty good that when you graduate you’ll go to work for a company that’s in a service industry, not in manufacturing or agriculture. Managers are recognizing that delivering consistent high-quality customer service is essential for survival and success in today’s competitive environment and that employees are an important part of that equation.32 The implication is clear—managers must create a customer-responsive organization where employees are friendly and courteous, accessible, knowledgeable, prompt in responding to customer needs, and willing to do what’s necessary to please the customer.33 We’ll look at customer service management in several chapters. Before we leave this topic, though, we want to share one more story that illustrates why it’s important for today’s managers (all managers, not just those in marketing) to understand what it takes to serve customers. During a broadcasted Stanley Cup playoff game, Comcast subscribers suddenly found themselves staring at a blank screen. Many of those customers got on Twitter to find out why. And it was there, not on a phone system, that they discovered a lightning strike in Atlanta had caused the power outage and that transmission would be restored as quickly as possible. Managers at Comcast understood how to exploit popular communications technology These kids and teens playing Nintendo’s DS portable video game in front of the official Pokemon store in Tokyo illustrates the importance of innovation in the company’s worldwide leadership within the interactive entertainment industry. Nintendo continues to create unique video games for young people. But the company’s innovation strategy also focuses on exploring new territory to launch new products, such as Wii, that cultivate a new wave of customers. Nintendo plans to further expand the concept of what a video game is, redefining it to include anything that brings people joy, from music to health management. 16 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT and the company’s smart use of Twitter “underscores what is becoming a staple in modern-day customer service . . . beefing up communications with customers through social-media tools.”34 Importance of Innovation to the Manager’s Job “Nothing is more risky than not innovating.”35Innovation means doing things differently, exploring new territory, and taking risks. And innovation isn’t just for high-tech or other technologically sophisticated organizations. Innovative efforts can be found in all types of organizations. For instance, the manager of the Best Buy store in Manchester, Connecticut, clearly understood the importance of getting employees to be innovative, a task made particularly challenging because the average Best Buy store is often staffed by young adults in their first or second jobs. “The complexity of the products demands a high level of training, but the many distractions that tempt college-aged employees keep the turnover potential high.” However, the store manager tackled the problem by getting employees to suggest new ideas. One idea—a “team close,” in which employees scheduled to work at the store’s closing time, closed the store together and walked out together as a team—has had a remarkable impact on employee attitudes and commitment.36 As you’ll see throughout the book, innovation is critical throughout all levels and parts of an organization. For example, at Tata of India, the company’s top manager, chairman Ratan Tata, told his employees during the bleak aspects of the global economic downturn to “Cut costs. Think out of the box. Even if the world around you is collapsing, be bold, be daring, think big.”37 And his employees obviously got the message. The company’s introduction of the $2,000 minicar, the Nano, was the talk of the global automotive industry. As these stories illustrate, innovation is critical. It’s so critical to today’s organizations and managers that we’ll also address this topic in several chapters. Importance of Sustainability to the Manager’s Job My company is going “green” by providing opportunities for our customers to go “green” and paper-free by using e-statement, online bill pay, and debit cards. We use recycled paper goods. It’s the world’s largest retailer with more than $408 billion in annual sales, 2.1 million employees, and 7,870 stores. Yes, we’re talking about Walmart. And Walmart is probably the last company that you’d think about in a section describing sustainability. However, Walmart announced in early 2010 that it would “cut some 20 million metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions from its supply chain by the end of 2015—the equivalent of removing more than 3.8 million cars from the road for a year.”38 This corporate action affirms that sustainability and green management have become mainstream issues for managers. What’s emerging in the twenty-first century is the concept of managing in a sustainable way, which has had the effect of widening corporate responsibility not only to managing in an efficient and effective way, but also to responding strategically to a wide range of environmental and societal challenges.39 Although “sustainability” means different things to different people, in essence, according to the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (2005), it is concerned with “meeting the needs of people today without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” From a business perspective, sustainability has been defined as a company’s ability to achieve its business goals and increase long-term shareholder value by integrating economic, environmental, and social opportunities into its business strategies.40 Sustainability issues are now moving up the agenda of business leaders and the boards of thousands of companies. Like the managers at Walmart are discovering, running an organization in a more sustainable way will mean that managers have to make informed business decisions based on thorough communication with various stakeholders, understanding their requirements, and starting to factor economic, environmental, and social aspects into how they pursue their business goals. We’ll examine managing for sustainability and its importance to planning, organizing, leading and controlling in several places throughout the book. CHAPTER 1 | MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS Why Study Management? 1.5 You may be wondering why you need to study management. If you’re majoring in accounting or marketing or any field other than management, you may not understand how studying management is going to help you in your career. We can explain the value of studying management by looking at three things: the universality of management, the reality of work, and the rewards and challenges of being a manager. LEARNING OUTCOME Explain the value of studying management. The Universality of Management Just how universal is the need for management in organizations? We can say with absolute certainty that management is needed in all types and sizes of organizations, at all organizational levels and in all organizational work areas, and in all organizations, no matter where they’re located. This is known as the universality of management. (See Exhibit 1-9.) In all these organizations, managers must plan, organize, lead, and control. However, that’s not to say that management is done the same way. What a supervisor in a software applications testing group at Microsoft does versus what the CEO of Microsoft does is a matter of degree and emphasis, not of function. Because both are managers, both will plan, organize, lead, and control. How much and how they do so will differ, however. Management is universally needed in all organizations, so we want to find ways to improve the way organizations are managed. Why? Because we interact with organizations every single day. Are you frustrated when you have to spend two hours in a state government office to get your driver’s license renewed? Are you irritated when none of the salespeople in a retail store seems interested in helping you? Is it annoying when you call an airline three times and customer sales representatives quote you three different prices for the same trip? These examples show problems created by poor management. Organizations that are well managed—and we’ll share many examples of these throughout the text— develop a loyal customer base, grow, and prosper, even during challenging times. Those that are poorly managed find themselves losing customers and revenues. By studying management, you’ll be able to recognize poor management and work to get it corrected. In EXHIBIT 1-9 Universal Need for Management All Sizes of Organizations Small All Organizational Areas Manufacturing—Marketing Human Resources—Accounting Information Systems—etc. Large All Types of Organizations Management Is Needed in... Profit Not-for-Profit All Organization Levels Bottom Top sustainability universality of management A company’s ability to achieve its business goals and increase long-term shareholder value by integrating economic, environmental, and social opportunities into its business strategies The reality that management is needed in all types and sizes of organizations, at all organizational levels, in all organizational areas, and in organizations no matter where located 17 18 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT addition, you’ll be able to recognize and support good management, whether it’s in an organization with which you’re simply interacting or whether it’s in an organization in which you’re employed. The Reality of Work Another reason for studying management is the reality that for most of you, once you graduate from college and begin your career, you will either manage or be managed. For those who plan to be managers, an understanding of management forms the foundation upon which to build your management skills. For those of you who don’t see yourself managing, you’re still likely to have to work with managers. Also, assuming that you’ll have to work for a living and recognizing that you’re very likely to work in an organization, you’ll probably have some managerial responsibilities even if you’re not a manager. Our experience tells us that you can gain a great deal of insight into the way your boss (and fellow employees) behave and how organizations function by studying management. Our point is that you don’t have to aspire to be a manager to gain something valuable from a course in management. Rewards and Challenges of Being a Manager I find being a manager rewarding because you can be a guiding hand and voice to another individual’s success. We can’t leave our discussion here without looking at the rewards and challenges of being a manager. (See Exhibit 1-10.) What does it mean to be a manager in today’s workplace? First, there are many challenges. It can be a tough and often thankless job. In addition, a portion of a manager’s job (especially at lower organizational levels) may entail duties that are often more clerical (compiling and filing reports, dealing with bureaucratic procedures, or doing paperwork) than managerial.41 Managers often have to deal with a variety of personalities and have to make do with limited resources. It can be a challenge to motivate workers in the face of uncertainty and chaos, as this recession has illustrated time and time again. And managers may find it difficult to successfully blend the knowledge, skills, ambitions, and experiences of a diverse work group. Finally, as a manager, you’re not in full control of your destiny. Your success typically is dependent upon others’ work performance. Despite these challenges, being a manager can be rewarding. You’re responsible for creating a work environment in which organizational members can do their work to the best of their ability and thus help the organization achieve its goals. You help others find meaning and fulfillment in their work. You get to support, coach, and nurture others and help them make good decisions. In addition, as a manager, you often have the opportunity to think creatively and use your imagination. You’ll get to meet and work with a variety of EXHIBIT 1-10 Rewards Challenges Rewards and Challenges of Being a Manager • Create a work environment in which organizational members can work to the best of their ability • Have opportunities to think creatively and use imagination • Help others find meaning and fulfillment in work • Support, coach, and nurture others • Work with a variety of people • Receive recognition and status in organization and community • Play a role in influencing organizational outcomes • Receive appropriate compensation in the form of salaries, bonuses, and stock options • Good managers are needed by organizations • Do hard work • May have duties that are more clerical than managerial • Have to deal with a variety of personalities • Often have to make do with limited resources • Motivate workers in chaotic and uncertain situations • Blend knowledge, skills, ambitions, and and experiences of a diverse work group • Success depends on others’ work performance CHAPTER 1 | MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS 19 people—both inside and outside the organization. Other rewards may include receiving recognition and status in your organization and in the community, playing a role in influencing organizational outcomes, and receiving attractive compensation in the form of salaries, bonuses, and stock options. Finally, as we said earlier in the chapter, organizations need good managers. It’s through the combined efforts of motivated and passionate people working together that organizations accomplish their goals. As a manager, you can be assured that your efforts, skills, and abilities are needed. Let’s Get Real: What Would You Do? My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma, page 4 A good place to work is one in which employees have the resources they need in order to best fulfill customers' requests and expectations. As companies and managers sometimes look to cut costs and do more with less, they face a fine balance between what employees and customers can have reduced without negative repercussions. I believe that employee engagement is a critical element in a smooth workplace. If I were in Lisa's situation, I would get the employees involved in brainstorming about areas they see room for cutting costs, ideas on work flows and processes, and what could help all work more efficiently and effectively. Employee engagement is heightened when employees feel like they have a voice in making their workplace a better place to work and that management is in tune with the needs and concerns of front line employees. Also, implementing changes and transitioning employees to a new way of doing business can be easier because employee buy-in is already there if they participated in some of the ground work and ideas. Lacy Martin Banking Center Manager, Assistant Vice President Commerce Bank Springfield, MO PREPARING FOR: Exams/Quizzes CHAPTER SUMMARY by Learning Outcomes LEARNING OUTCOME 1.1 Explain why managers are important to organizations. Managers are important to organizations for three reasons. First, organizations need their managerial skills and abilities in uncertain, complex, and chaotic times. Second, managers are critical to getting things done in organizations. Finally, managers contribute to employee productivity and loyalty; the way employees are managed can affect the organization’s financial performance; and managerial ability has been shown to be important in creating organizational value. LEARNING OUTCOME 1.2 Tell who managers are and where they work. Managers coordinate and oversee the work of other people so that organizational goals can be accomplished. Nonmanagerial employees work directly on a job or task and have no one reporting to them. In traditionally structured organizations, managers can be firstline, middle, or top. In other more loosely configured organizations, the managers may not be as readily identifiable, although someone must fulfill that role. Managers work in an organization, which is a deliberate arrangement of people to accomplish some specific purpose. Organizations have three characteristics: a distinctive purpose, composed of people, and a deliberate structure. Many of today’s organizations are structured to be more open, flexible, and responsive to changes. LEARNING OUTCOME 1.3 Describe the functions, roles, and skills of managers. Broadly speaking, management is what managers do and management involves coordinating and overseeing the efficient and effective completion of others’ work activities. Efficiency means doing things right; effectiveness means doing the right things. The four functions of management include planning (defining goals, establishing strategies, and developing plans), organizing (arranging and structuring work), leading (working with and through people), and controlling (monitoring, comparing, and correcting work performance). Mintzberg’s managerial roles include interpersonal, which involve people and other ceremonial/symbolic duties (figurehead, leader, and liaison); informational, which involve collecting, receiving, and disseminating information (monitor, disseminator, and spokesperson); and decisional, which involve making choices (entrepreneur, disturbance handler, resource allocator, and negotiator). Mintzberg’s newest description of what managers do proposes that managing is about influencing action, which managers do in three ways: by managing actions directly, by managing people who take action, and by managing information that impels people to take action. Katz’s managerial skills include technical (job-specific knowledge and techniques), human (ability to work well with people), and conceptual (ability to think and express ideas). Technical skills are most important for lower-level managers while conceptual skills are most important for top managers. Human skills are equally important for all managers. Some other managerial skills also identified include managing human capital, inspiring commitment, managing change, using purposeful networking, and so forth. LEARNING OUTCOME 1.4 Describe the factors that are reshaping and redefining the manager’s job. The changes impacting managers’ jobs include global economic and political uncertainties, changing workplaces, ethical issues, security threats, and changing technology. Managers must be concerned with customer service because employee attitudes and behaviors play a big role in customer satisfaction. Managers must also be concerned with innovation because it is important for organizations to be competitive. And finally, managers must be concerned with sustainability as business goals are developed. 20 CHAPTER 1 | MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS LEARNING OUTCOME Explain the value of studying management. 1.5 It’s important to study management for three reasons: (1) the universality of management, which refers to the fact that managers are needed in all types and sizes of organizations, at all organizational levels and work areas, and in all global locations; (2) the reality of work—that is, you will either manage or be managed; and (3) the awareness of the significant rewards (such as, creating work environments to help people work to the best of their ability; supporting and encouraging others; helping others find meaning and fulfillment in work; etc.) and challenges (such as, it’s hard work; may have more clerical than managerial duties; have to deal with a variety of personalities; etc.) in being a manager. 1.1 1.5 REVIEW AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. How do managers differ from nonmanagerial employees? 2. Is your course instructor a manager? Discuss in terms of managerial functions, managerial roles, and skills. 3. “The manager’s most basic responsibility is to focus people toward performance of work activities to achieve desired outcomes.” What’s your interpretation of this statement? Do you agree with it? Why or why not? 4. Explain the universality of management concept. Does it still hold true in today’s world? Why or why not? 5. Is business management a profession? Why or why not? Do some external research in answering this question. 6. Is there one best “style” of management? Why or why not? 7. Does the way that contemporary organizations are structured appeal to you? Why or why not? 8. In today’s environment, which is more important to organizations—efficiency or effectiveness? Explain your choice. 9. Researchers at Harvard Business School found that the most important managerial behaviors involve two fundamental things: enabling people to move forward in their work and treating them decently as human beings. What do you think of these two managerial behaviors? What are the implications for someone, like yourself, who is studying management? 10. “Management is undoubtedly one of humankind’s most important inventions.” Do you agree with this statement? Why or why not? ETHICS DILEMMA claims of having an academic degree they didn’t actually have. Such misstatements (accidental or deliberate) cost the CEOs at Radio Shack, Herbalife, USANA Health Sciences, and MGM Mirage their jobs. Why do you think lying about your academic credentials is considered wrong? What ethical issues does it bring up? Which is worse: lying about your academic credentials or lying about your work history? Why? Lying on your résumé.42 One survey indicated that some 44 percent of people lie about their work history. Another survey found that 93 percent of hiring managers who found a lie on a job candidate’s résumé did not hire that person. What if the person lying on a résumé was the top executive? A survey of 358 senior executives and directors at 53 publicly traded companies turned up seven instances of 21 22 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT SKILLS EXERCISE Developing Your Political Skill About the Skill Research has shown that people differ in their political skills.43 Those who are politically skilled are more effective in their use of influence tactics. Political skill also appears to be more effective when the stakes are high. Finally, politically skilled individuals are able to exert their influence without others detecting it, which is important in being effective so that you’re not labeled political. A person’s political skill is determined by his or her networking ability, interpersonal influence, social astuteness, and apparent sincerity. Steps in Practicing the Skill 1. Develop your networking ability. A good network can be a powerful tool. You can begin building a network by getting to know important people in your work area and the organization and then developing relationships with individuals who are in positions of power. Volunteer for committees or offer your help on projects that will be noticed by those in positions of power. Attend important organizational functions so that you can be seen as a team player and someone who’s interested in the organization’s success. Start a rolodex file of names of individuals that you meet even if for a brief moment. Then, when you need advice on work, use your connections and network with others throughout the organization. 2. Work on gaining interpersonal influence. People will listen to you when they’re comfortable and feel at ease WORKING TOGETHER Team Exercise By this time in your life, all of you have had to work with individuals in managerial positions (or maybe you were the manager), either through work experiences or through other organizational experiences (social, hobby/interest, religious, and so forth). What do you think makes some managers better than others? Do certain characteristics around you. Work on your communication skills so that you can communicate easily and effectively with others. Work on developing good rapport with people in all areas and at all levels of your organization. Be open, friendly, and willing to pitch in. The amount of interpersonal influence you have will be affected by how well people like you. 3. Develop your social astuteness. Some people have an innate ability to understand people and sense what they’re thinking. If you don’t have that ability, you’ll have to work at developing your social astuteness by doing things such as saying the right things at the right time, paying close attention to people’s facial expressions, and trying to determine whether others have hidden agendas. 4. Be sincere. Sincerity is important to getting people to want to associate with you. Be genuine in what you say and do. And show a genuine interest in others and their situations. Practicing the Skill Select each of the components of political skill and spend one week working on it. Write a brief set of notes describing your experiences—good and bad. Were you able to begin developing a network of people throughout the organization or did you work at developing your social astuteness, maybe by starting to recognize and interpret people’s facial expressions and the meaning behind those expressions? What could you have done differently to be more politically skilled? Once you begin to recognize what’s involved with political skills, you should find yourself becoming more connected and politically adept. distinguish good managers? Form small groups with 3–4 other class members. Discuss your experiences with managers—good and bad. Draw up a list of the characteristics of those individuals you felt were good managers. For each item, indicate which management function and which management skill you think it falls under. As a group, be prepared to share your list with the class and to explain your choice of management function and skill. MY TURN TO BE A MANAGER Use the most current Occupational Outlook Handbook (U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics) to research three different categories of managers. For each, prepare a bulleted list that describes the following: the nature of the work; training and other qualifications needed; earnings; and job outlook and projections data. Get in the habit of reading at least one current business periodical (Wall Street Journal, BusinessWeek, Fortune, Fast Company, Forbes, etc.). Keep a file with interesting information you find about managers or managing. Using current business periodicals, find five examples of managers you would describe as Master Managers. Write a paper describing these individuals as managers and why you feel they deserve this title. Steve’s and Mary’s suggested readings: Henry Mintzberg, Managing (Berrett-Koehler Publishers, CHAPTER 1 | MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS 2009); Matthew Stewart, The Management Myth (W. W. Norton & Company, 2009); Paul Osterman, The Truth About Middle Managers: Who They Are, How They Work, and Why They Matter (Harvard Business Press, 2008); Stephen P. Robbins, The Truth About Managing People, 2e (Financial Times/Prentice Hall, 2007); Gary Hamel, The Future of Management (Harvard Business School, 2007); Rod Wagner and James K. Harter, 12 Elements of Great Managing (Gallup Press, 2006); Marcus Buckingham, First Break All the Rules: What the World’s Greatest Managers Do Differently (Simon & Schuster, 1999); and Peter F. Drucker, The Executive in Action (Harper Business, 1985 and 1964). Interview two different managers and ask them at least three of the questions that were listed in the Let’s Get Real: Meet the Managers and Let’s Get Real: F2F boxes in the chapter. Type up the questions and their answers to turn in to your professor. Accountants and other professionals have certification programs to verify their skills, knowledge, and professionalism. What about managers? Two certification programs for managers include the Certified Manager (Institute of Certified Professional Managers) and the Certified Business Manager (Association of Professional in Business Management). Research each of these programs. Prepare a bulleted list of what each involves. If you’re involved in student organizations, volunteer for leadership roles or for projects where you can practice planning, organizing, leading, and controlling different projects and activities. You can also gain valuable managerial experience by taking a leadership role in class team projects. In your own words, write down three things you learned in this chapter about being a good manager. Self-knowledge can be a powerful learning tool. Go to mymanagementlab.com and complete any of these self-assessment exercises: How Motivated Am I to Manage? How Well Do I Handle Ambiguity? How Confident Am I in My Abilities to Succeed? or What’s My Attitude Toward Achievement? Using the results of your assessments, identify personal strengths and weaknesses. What will you do to reinforce your strengths and improve your weaknesses? CASE APPLICATION More Than a Good Story ake and Rocket, a cartoon guy and his cartoon dog, can be J found on most of the apparel and other branded products sold by the Life is good® company.44 With his perky beret (or other appropriate head gear), Jake has that contented look of being able to enjoy life as it is and finding reasons to be happy right now. And Rocket? Well, he’s just happy to be along for the ride. And what a ride it’s been for the two! They’ve been a part of the company’s growth to over $100 million in revenues. Company co-founders and brothers, Bert and John Jacobs have a personal and business philosophy much like Jake: simplicity, humor, and humility. However, both understand that even with this philosophy, they need to be good managers and they need good managers throughout the organization in order to stay successful. Bert and John designed their first tee shirts in 1989 and sold them door-to-door in college dorms along the East Coast and in Boston where The management style of Life is good co-founders and brothers John (left) and Bert Jacobs is based on their personal and business philosophy of simplicity, humor, and humility. they’d set up shop using an old card table in locations on one-way streets so they could pick up and move quickly if they needed to. They used this simple sales approach because, like many young entrepreneurs, they couldn’t afford required business licenses. Although they met a lot of wonderful 23 24 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT people and heard a lot of good stories during those early years, sales weren’t that great. As the company legend goes, the brothers “lived on peanut butter and jelly, slept in their beat-up van, and showered when they could.” During one of their usual post-sales-trip parties, Bert and John asked some friends for advice on an assortment of images and slogans they had put together. Those friends (some of whom now work for the company) liked the “Life is good” slogan and a drawing of Jake that had been sketched by John. So Bert and John printed up 48 Jake shirts for a local street fair in Cambridge, Massachusetts. By noon, the 48 shirts were gone, something that had never happened! The brothers were smart enough to recognize that they might be on to something. And, as the old saying goes . . . the rest is history! Since that momentous day in 1994, they’ve sold nearly 20 million Life is good tee shirts featuring Jake and Rocket. Bert attributes their success to his belief that “the ‘Life is good’ message, coupled with the carefree image of Jake, was simple enough to swallow, light enough not to be mistaken for preachy, and profound enough to matter.” He goes on to say that, “Note that we don’t say ‘Life is great!’ We say life is good, period. Three simple words. People connect with it instantly.” Another important facet of Life is good is their commitment to good causes. And those aren’t just “words” to Bert and John; they act on their words. They are passionately involved with Project Joy, which is a nonprofit organization that fosters the development of at-risk children through the art of play. Bert says their partnership with Project Joy aligns with Life is good’s whole philosophy. The financial commitment the company has made is supported by its Life is good Kids Foundation, which raises funds through the popular Life is good festivals and through sales of fundraising t-shirts and books at its retail stores. Today, Life is good, based in Boston, has a product line of more than 900 items. The company continues to grow about 30 to 40 percent annually. Bert and John’s style of managing is guided by another of the company’s mottoes, “Do what you like. Like what you do.”® As the company’s Web site states, “In addition to knowledge, skills, and experience, we look to hire people who possess the same optimistic outlook on life that Jake has.” It’s an approach that seems to be working for Bert and John and for Jake and Rocket. Discussion Questions 1. As the top managers of their company, what types of issues might Bert and John have to deal with? Be as specific as possible. Which management functions might be most important to them? Why? 2. Using descriptions from the case, describe Bert and John’s managerial style. Would this approach work for other organizations? Why or why not? 3. How do you think the company’s motto “Do what you like. Like what you do” might affect how managers manage? Be specific. 4. What managerial challenges might there be in having friends work for your business? How could these challenges be kept inconsequential? 5. Would you want to work for a company like this? Why or why not? 6. In what ways would the Life is good managers (corporate and retail store) have to deal with the challenges of customer service, innovation, and sustainability? Be specific in your description. CASE APPLICATION Flight Plans ith a small year-round population, Branson, Missouri, is in a location not easily accessible by air W service.45 The city, best known for its country music and music variety shows and family-style attractions, also has the kinds of outdoor activities that attracted more than 8 million visitors last year, CHAPTER 1 | MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS “earning it the unofficial nickname ‘Vegas without the gambling.’” About 95 percent of those visitors come by car or bus. But now there’s a new show in town—the Branson Airport. The $155 million airport, which opened in May 2009, is an experiment that many people are watching. The airport is generating interest from city governments and the travel industry because it’s the nation’s first commercial airport built and operated as a private, for-profit business with absolutely no government funding. As one expert said, “...unpretentious little Branson Airport could have an outsize effect it if works. It could turn what now is a mostly regional tourist spot into a national destination for tourists.” Steve Peet, the airport’s chief executive, admits that he had no idea where Branson was in 2000. But by 2004, he was convinced there was money to be made flying tourists there. He says, “If you were ever going to think about building a private commercial airport, this would be the place to do it. How many more visitors would come here if we made it easier and affordable for them? It seemed like an incredible opportunity.” So, using private financing, he decided to build a new commercial airport a short distance south of Branson’s popular music shows district. Both Peet and Jeff Bourk, executive director of the airport, continue to tackle the managerial challenges of turning that dream into reality. Construction work on the airport terminal and the 7,140-foot runway (which can accommodate most narrow-body jets) went smoothly. Bourk believed that much of that was due to minimal red tape. Because the airport wasn’t using federal assistance, it didn’t face the restrictions that accompany taking government money, which also meant it could pick and choose the airlines it allowed in. To attract those airlines, the airport agreed to not allow other competitors in. Also, the airport owners kept the airlines’ operating costs low since airport employees do much of the work usually done by an airline’s ground staff. Initially, the airport’s owners offered exclusive contracts to AirTran and Sun Country on certain routes to Branson. Now, Frontier Airlines and the newly-formed Branson AirExpress have added service. Mr. Peet emphasizes that they want the airlines to succeed. “We want to build real service, sustainable service.” The airport earns money from landing fees (based on number of passengers, not on weight), aircraft fuel sales, a percentage of every sale at the airport’s facility, and a $8.24 fee paid by the city of Branson for each arriving passenger. To reach Peet’s goal of 250,000 passengers a year, the airport needs only 685 passengers (five to six planeloads) a day. He says, “What we’re doing is going to work.” But first, they have to deal with some significant turbulence. Branson city officials (who have been elected and hired since the original agreement was signed) now say that the contract between the city and the airport regarding the arriving passenger fee may not even be constitutional. Airport officials respond that, “We have a legal document and we expect to be paid.” And Bourk maintains that Branson benefits from every tourist that goes through the airport. “We bring in high-quality tourists all over the country to spend money in Branson for a cheap price of $8.24.” Discussion Questions 1. Using the four functions as your guide, what challenges would Jeff Bourk face in managing the Branson Airport? 2. Again, using the four functions as your guide, do you think the managerial challenges Jeff Bourk faced when getting the airport up and running are different from what he faces now in actually overseeing the airport’s operation? Explain. 3. What management roles would Jeff Bourk be playing as he (a) negotiates new contracts with potential airlines, (b) works with the airport employees in providing a high level of customer service to arriving and departing passengers, and (c) resolves the contractual issues with the city of Branson? Be specific and explain your choices. 4. What skills would be most important to a manager like Jeff Bourk? Explain your choices. 25 This page intentionally left blank Management History Module H enry Ford once said,“History is more or less bunk.” Well...he was wrong! History is important because it can put current activities in perspective. In this module, we’re going to take a trip back in time to see how the field of study called management has evolved. What you’re going to see is that today’s managers still use many elements of the historical approaches to management. Focus on the following learning outcomes as you read and study this module. MH MH MH MH MH 4 5 Describe some early management examples. page 28 Explain the various theories in the classical approach. page 29 Discuss the development and uses of the behavioral approach. page 32 Describe the quantitative approach. page 34 Explain the various theories in the contemporary approach. page 36 1 2 3 LEARNING OUTCOMES 27 28 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT MH LEARNING OUTCOME Describe some early management examples. 1 Early Management Management has been practiced a long time. Organized endeavors directed by people responsible for planning, organizing, leading, and controlling activities have existed for thousands of years. Let’s look at some of the most interesting examples. The Egyptian pyramids and the Great Wall of China are proof that projects of tremendous scope, employing tens of thousands of people, were completed in ancient times.1 It took more than 100,000 workers some 20 years to construct a single pyramid. Who told each worker what to do? Who ensured that there would be enough stones at the site to keep workers busy? The answer is managers. Someone had to plan what was to be done, organize people and materials to do it, make sure those workers got the work done, and impose some controls to ensure that everything was done as planned. Another example of early management can be found in the city of Venice, which was a major economic and trade center in the 1400s. The Venetians developed an early form of business enterprise and engaged in many activities common to today’s organizations. For instance, at the arsenal of Venice, warships were floated along the canals, and at each stop, materials and riggings were added to the ship.2 Sounds a lot like a car “floating” along an assembly line, doesn’t it? In addition, the Venetians used warehouse and inventory systems to keep track of materials, human resource management functions to manage the labor force (including wine breaks), and an accounting system to keep track of revenues and costs. In 1776, Adam Smith published The Wealth of Nations, in which he argued the economic advantages that organizations and society would gain from the division of labor (or job specialization)—that is, breaking down jobs into narrow and repetitive tasks. Using the pin industry as an example, Smith claimed that 10 individuals, each doing a specialized task, could produce about 48,000 pins a day among them. However, if each person worked alone performing each task separately, it would be quite an accomplishment to produce even 10 pins a day! Smith concluded that division of labor increased productivity by increasing each worker’s skill and dexterity, saving time lost in changing tasks, and creating laborsaving inventions and machinery. Job specialization continues to be popular. For example, think of the specialized tasks performed by members of a hospital surgery team, meal preparation tasks done by workers in restaurant kitchens, or positions played by players on a football team. Starting in the late eighteenth century when machine power was substituted for human power, a point in history known as the industrial revolution, it became more economical to manufacture goods in factories rather than at home. These large efficient factories needed someone to forecast demand, ensure that enough material was on hand to make products, assign tasks to people, direct daily activities, and so forth. That “someone” was a manager: These managers would need formal theories to guide them in running these large organizations. It wasn’t until the early 1900s, however, that the first steps toward developing such theories were taken. | MANAGEMENT HISTORY MODULE 29 EXHIBIT MH-1 Historical Background Classical Approaches Quantitative Approach Behavioral Approach Major Approaches to Management Contemporary Approaches Early Examples of Management Scientific Management Early Advocates Systems Approach Adam Smith General Administrative Hawthorne Studies Contingency Approach Industrial Revolution Organizational Behavior In this module, we’ll look at four major approaches to management theory: classical, behavioral, quantitative, and contemporary. (See Exhibit MH-1.) Keep in mind that each approach is concerned with trying to explain management from the perspective of what was important at that time in history and the backgrounds and interests of the researchers. Each of the four approaches contributes to our overall understanding of management, but each is also a limited view of what it is and how to best practice it. Classical Approach Although we’ve seen how management has been used in organized efforts since early history, the formal study of management didn’t begin until early in the twentieth century. These first studies of management, often called the classical approach, emphasized rationality and making organizations and workers as efficient as possible. Two major theories comprise the classical approach: scientific management and general administrative theory. The two most important contributors to scientific management theory were Frederick W. Taylor and the husband-wife team of Frank and Lillian Gilbreth. The two most important contributors to general administrative theory were Henri Fayol and Max Weber. Let’s take a look at each of these important figures in management history. If you had to pinpoint when modern management theory was born, 1911 might be a good choice. That was when Frederick Winslow Taylor’s Principles of Scientific Management was published. Its contents were widely embraced by managers around the world. Taylor’s book described the theory of scientific management: the use of scientific methods to define the “one best way” for a job to be done. Taylor worked at the Midvale and Bethlehem Steel Companies in Pennsylvania. As a mechanical engineer with a Quaker and Puritan background, he was continually appalled by workers’ inefficiencies. Employees used vastly different techniques to do the same job. They often “took it easy” on the job, and Taylor believed that worker output was only about one-third of what was possible. Virtually no work standards existed and workers were placed in jobs with little or no concern for matching their abilities and aptitudes with the tasks they were required to do. Taylor set out to remedy that by applying the scientific method to shop-floor jobs. He spent more than two decades passionately pursuing the “one best way” for such jobs to be done. MH 2 LEARNING OUTCOME Explain the various theories in the classical approach. 30 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT EXHIBIT MH-2 Taylor’s Scientific Management Principles 1. Develop a science for each element of an individual’s work to replace the old rule-ofthumb method. 2. Scientifically select and then train, teach, and develop the worker. 3. Heartily cooperate with the workers so as to ensure that all work is done in accordance with the principles of the science that has been developed. 4. Divide work and responsibility almost equally between management and workers. Management does all work for which it is better suited than the workers. Taylor’s experiences at Midvale led him to define clear guidelines for improving production efficiency. He argued that these four principles of management (see Exhibit MH-2) would result in prosperity for both workers and managers.3 How did these scientific principles really work? Let’s look at an example. Probably the best known example of Taylor’s scientific management efforts was the pig iron experiment. Workers loaded “pigs” of iron (each weighing 92 lbs.) onto rail cars. Their daily average output was 12.5 tons. However, Taylor believed that by scientifically analyzing the job to determine the “one best way” to load pig iron, output could be increased to 47 or 48 tons per day. After scientifically applying different combinations of procedures, techniques, and tools, Taylor succeeded in getting that level of productivity. How? By putting the right person on the job with the correct tools and equipment, having the worker follow his instructions exactly, and motivating the worker with an economic incentive of a significantly higher daily wage. Using similar approaches for other jobs, Taylor was able to define the “one best way” for doing each job. Overall, Taylor achieved consistent productivity improvements in the range of 200 percent or more. Based on his groundbreaking studies of manual work using scientific principles, Taylor became known as the “father” of scientific management. His ideas spread in the United States and to other countries and inspired others to study and develop methods of scientific management. His most prominent followers were Frank and Lillian Gilbreth. A construction contractor by trade, Frank Gilbreth gave up that career to study scientific management after hearing Taylor speak at a professional meeting. Frank and his wife Lillian, a psychologist, studied work to eliminate inefficient hand-andbody motions. The Gilbreths also experimented with the design and use of the proper tools and equipment for optimizing work performance.4 Also, as parents of 12 children, the Gilbreths ran their household using scientific management principles and techniques. In fact, two of their children wrote a book, Cheaper by the Dozen, which described life with the two masters of efficiency. Frank is probably best known for his bricklaying experiments. By carefully analyzing the bricklayer’s job, he reduced the number of motions in laying exterior brick from 18 to about 5, and in laying interior brick from 18 to 2. Using Gilbreth’s techniques, a bricklayer was more productive and less fatigued at the end of the day. The Gilbreths invented a device called a microchronometer that recorded a worker’s hand-and-body motions and the amount of time spent doing each motion. Wasted motions missed by the naked eye could be identified and eliminated. The Gilbreths also devised a classification scheme to label 17 basic hand motions (such as search, grasp, hold), which they called therbligs (Gilbreth spelled backward with the th transposed). This scheme gave the Gilbreths a more precise way of analyzing a worker’s exact hand movements. How today’s managers use scientific management Many of the guidelines and techniques that Taylor and the Gilbreths devised for improving production efficiency are still used in organizations today. When managers analyze the basic work tasks that must be performed, use time-and-motion study to eliminate wasted motions, hire the best-qualified workers for a job, or design incentive systems based on output, they’re using the principles of scientific management. | MANAGEMENT HISTORY MODULE General administrative theory focused more on what managers do and what constituted good management practice. We introduced Henri Fayol in Chapter 1 because he first identified five functions that managers perform: planning, organizing, commanding, coordinating, and controlling.5 Fayol wrote during the same time period as Taylor. While Taylor was concerned with first-line managers and the scientific method, Fayol’s attention was directed at the activities of all managers. He wrote from his personal experience as the managing director of a large French coal-mining firm. Fayol described the practice of management as something distinct from accounting, finance, production, distribution, and other typical business functions. His belief that management was an activity common to all business endeavors, government, and even the home led him to develop 14 principles of management—fundamental rules of management that could be applied to all organizational situations and taught in schools. These principles are shown in Exhibit MH-3. 1. Division of Work. Specialization increases output by making employees more efficient. 2. Authority. Managers must be able to give orders, and authority gives them this right. 3. Discipline. Employees must obey and respect the rules that govern the organization. 4. Unity of command. Every employee should receive orders from only one superior. 5. Unity of direction. The organization should have a single plan of action to guide managers and workers. 6. Subordination of individual interests to the general interest. The interests of any one employee or group of employees should not take precedence over the interests of the organization as a whole. 7. Remuneration. Workers must be paid a fair wage for their services. 8. Centralization. This term refers to the degree to which subordinates are involved in decision making. 9. Scalar chain. The line of authority from top management to the lowest ranks is the scalar chain. 10. Order. People and materials should be in the right place at the right time. 11. Equity. Managers should be kind and fair to their subordinates. 12. Stability of tenure of personnel. Management should provide orderly personnel planning and ensure that replacements are available to fill vacancies. 13. Initiative. Employees who are allowed to originate and carry out plans will exert high levels of effort. 14. Esprit de corps. Promoting team spirit will build harmony and unity within the organization. Weber (pronounced VAY-ber) was a German sociologist who studied organizations.6 Writing in the early 1900s, he developed a theory of authority structures and relations based on an ideal type of organization he called a bureaucracy—a form of organization characterized by division of labor, a clearly defined hierarchy, detailed rules and regulations, and impersonal relationships. (See Exhibit MH-4.) Weber recognized that this “ideal bureaucracy” didn’t exist in reality. Instead he intended it as a basis for theorizing about how work could be done in large groups. His theory became the structural design for many of today’s large organizations. Bureaucracy, as described by Weber, is a lot like scientific management in its ideology. Both emphasized rationality, predictability, impersonality, technical competence, and authoritarianism. Although Weber’s ideas were less practical than Taylor’s, the fact that his “ideal type” still describes many contemporary organizations attests to their importance. EXHIBIT MH-3 Fayol’s 14 Principles of Management 31 32 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT EXHIBIT MH-4 Characteristics of Weber's Bureaucracy Jobs broken down into simple, routine, and well-defined tasks Managers are career professionals, not owners of units they manage Positions organized in a hierarchy with a clear chain of command Division of Labor Career Orientation Authority Hierarchy A bureaucracy should have Formal Selection Impersonality Uniform application of rules and controls, not according to personalities Formal Rules and Regulations People selected for jobs based on technical qualifications System of written rules and standard operating procedures How today’s managers use general administrative theory Several of our current management ideas and practices can be directly traced to the contributions of general administrative theory. For instance, the functional view of the manager’s job can be attributed to Fayol. In addition, his 14 principles serve as a frame of reference from which many current management concepts—such as managerial authority, centralized decision making, reporting to only one boss, and so forth—have evolved. Weber’s bureaucracy was an attempt to formulate an ideal prototype for organizations. Although many characteristics of Weber’s bureaucracy are still evident in large organizations, his model isn’t as popular today as it was in the twentieth century. Many managers feel that a bureaucratic structure hinders individual employees’ creativity and limits an organization’s ability to respond quickly to an increasingly dynamic environment. However, even in flexible organizations of creative professionals—such as Microsoft, Samsung, General Electric, or Cisco Systems—some bureaucratic mechanisms are necessary to ensure that resources are used efficiently and effectively. MH LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss the development and uses of the behavioral approach. 3 Behavioral Approach As we know, managers get things done by working with people. This explains why some writers have chosen to look at management by focusing on the organization’s people. The field of study that researches the actions (behavior) of people at work is called organizational behavior (OB). Much of what managers do today when managing people—motivating, leading, building trust, working with a team, managing conflict, and so forth—has come out of OB research. Although a number of individuals in the early twentieth century recognized the importance of people to an organization’s success, four stand out as early advocates of the OB approach: Robert Owen, Hugo Munsterberg, Mary Parker | MANAGEMENT HISTORY MODULE 33 EXHIBIT MH-5 • Concerned about deplorable Early OB Advocates working conditions • Actual manager who thought organizations were social systems that required cooperation • Believed manager’s job was to communicate and stimulate employees’ high levels of effort • First to argue that organizations were open systems Chester Barnard 1930s • Proposed idealistic workplace • Argued that money spent • Pioneer in field of industrial improving labor was smart investment psychology—scientific study of people at work • Suggested using psychological tests for employee selection, learning theory concepts for employee training, and study of human behavior for employee motivation Robert Owen Late 1700s Early Advocates of OB Hugo Munsterberg Early 1900s Mary Parker Follett Early 1900s • One of the first to recognize that organizations could be viewed from perspective of individual and group behavior • Proposed more people-oriented ideas than scientific management followers • Thought organizations should be based on group ethic Follett, and Chester Barnard. Their contributions were varied and distinct, yet all believed that people were the most important asset of the organization and should be managed accordingly. Their ideas provided the foundation for such management practices as employee selection procedures, motivation programs, and work teams. Exhibit MH-5 summarizes each individual’s most important ideas. Without question, the most important contribution to the OB field came out of the Hawthorne Studies, a series of studies conducted at the Western Electric Company Works in Cicero, Illinois. These studies, which started in 1924, were initially designed by Western Electric industrial engineers as a scientific management experiment. They wanted to examine the effect of various lighting levels on worker productivity. Like any good scientific experiment, control and experimental groups were set up with the experimental group being exposed to various lighting intensities, and the control group working under a constant intensity. If you were the industrial engineers in charge of this experiment, what would you have expected to happen? It’s logical to think that individual output in the experimental group would be directly related to the intensity of the light. However, they found that as the level of light was increased in the experimental group, output for both groups increased. Then, much to the surprise of the engineers, as the light level was decreased in the experimental group, productivity continued to increase in both groups. In fact, a productivity decrease was observed in the experimental group only when the level of light was reduced to that of a moonlit night. What would explain these unexpected results? The engineers weren’t sure, but concluded that lighting intensity was not directly related to group productivity, and that something else must have contributed to the results. They weren’t able to pinpoint what that “something else” was, though. 34 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT In 1927, the Western Electric engineers asked Harvard professor Elton Mayo and his associates to join the study as consultants. Thus began a relationship that would last through 1932 and encompass numerous experiments in the redesign of jobs, changes in workday and workweek length, introduction of rest periods, and individual versus group wage plans.7 For example, one experiment was designed to evaluate the effect of a group piecework incentive pay system on group productivity. The results indicated that the incentive plan had less effect on a worker’s output than did group pressure, acceptance, and security. The researchers concluded that social norms or group standards were the key determinants of individual work behavior. Scholars generally agree that the Hawthorne Studies had a game-changing impact on management beliefs about the role of people in organizations. Mayo concluded that people’s behavior and attitudes are closely related, that group factors significantly affect individual behavior, that group standards establish individual worker output, and that money is less a factor in determining output than are group standards, group attitudes, and security. These conclusions led to a new emphasis on the human behavior factor in the management of organizations. Although critics attacked the research procedures, analyses of findings, and conclusions, it’s of little importance from a historical perspective whether the Hawthorne Studies were academically sound or their conclusions justified.8 What is important is that they stimulated an interest in human behavior in organizations. How today’s managers use the behavioral approach The behavioral approach has largely shaped how today’s organizations are managed. From the way that managers design jobs to the way that they work with employee teams to the way that they communicate, we see elements of the behavioral approach. Much of what the early OB advocates proposed and the conclusions from the Hawthorne studies have provided the foundation for our current theories of motivation, leadership, group behavior and development, and numerous other behavioral approaches. MH LEARNING OUTCOME Describe the quantitative approach. 4 Quantitative Approach Although passengers bumping into each other when trying to find their seats on an airplane can be a mild annoyance for them, it’s a bigger problem for airlines because lines get backed up, slowing down how quickly the plane can get back in the air. Based on research in spacetime geometry, one airline innovated a unique boarding process called “reverse pyramid” that has saved at least 2 minutes in boarding time.9 This is an example of the quantitative approach, which is the use of quantitative techniques to improve decision making. This approach also is known as management science. The quantitative approach evolved from mathematical and statistical solutions developed for military problems during World War II. After the war was over, many of these techniques used for military problems were applied to businesses. For example, one group of military officers, nicknamed the Whiz Kids, joined Ford Motor Company in the mid-1940s and immediately began using statistical methods and quantitative models to improve decision making. What exactly does the quantitative approach do? It involves applying statistics, optimization models, information models, computer simulations, and other quantitative techniques to management activities. Linear programming, for instance, is a technique that managers use to improve resource allocation decisions. Work scheduling can be more efficient as a result of critical-path scheduling analysis. The economic order quantity model helps managers determine optimum inventory levels. | MANAGEMENT HISTORY MODULE 35 Each of these is an example of quantitative techniques being applied to improve managerial decision making. Another area where quantitative techniques are used frequently is in total quality management. A quality revolution swept through both the business and public sectors in the 1980s and 1990s.10 It was inspired by a small group of quality experts, the most famous being W. Edwards Deming (pictured at right) and Joseph M. Juran. The ideas and techniques they advocated in the 1950s had few supporters in the United States but were enthusiastically embraced by Japanese organizations. As Japanese manufacturers began beating U.S. competitors in quality comparisons, however, Western managers soon took a more serious look at Deming’s and Juran’s ideas . . . ideas that became the basis for today’s quality management programs. Total quality management, or TQM, is a management philosophy devoted to continual improvement and responding to customer needs and expectations. (See Exhibit MH-6.) The term customer includes anyone who interacts with the organization’s product or services internally or externally. It encompasses employees and suppliers as well as the people who purchase the organization’s goods or services. Continual improvement isn’t possible without accurate measurements, which require statistical techniques that measure every critical variable in the organization’s work processes. These measurements are compared against standards to identify and correct problems. EXHIBIT MH-6 1. Intense focus on the customer. The customer includes outsiders who buy the organization’s products or services and internal customers who interact with and serve others in the organization. 2. Concern for continual improvement. Quality management is a commitment to never being satisfied. “Very good” is not good enough. Quality can always be improved. 3. Process focused. Quality management focuses on work processes as the quality of goods and services is continually improved. 4. Improvement in the quality of everything the organization does. This relates to the final product, how the organization handles deliveries, how rapidly it responds to complaints, how politely the phones are answered, and the like. 5. Accurate measurement. Quality management uses statistical techniques to measure every critical variable in the organization’s operations. These are compared against standards to identify problems, trace them to their roots, and eliminate their causes. 6. Empowerment of employees. Quality management involves the people on the line in the improvement process. Teams are widely used in quality management programs as empowerment vehicles for finding and solving problems. How today’s managers use the quantitative approach No one likes long lines, especially residents of New York City. If they see a long checkout line, they often go somewhere else. However, at Whole Foods’ first gourmet supermarkets in Manhattan, customers found something different—that is, the longer the line, the shorter the wait. When ready to check out, customers are guided into serpentine single lines that feed into numerous checkout lanes. Whole Foods, widely known for its organic food selections, can charge premium prices, which allow it the luxury of staffing all those checkout lanes. And customers are finding that their wait times are shorter than expected.11 The science of keeping lines moving is known as queue management. And for Whole Foods, this quantitative technique has translated into strong sales at its Manhattan stores. The quantitative approach contributes directly to management decision making in the areas of planning and control. For instance, when managers make budgeting, queuing, scheduling, quality control, and similar decisions, they typically rely on quantitative techniques. Specialized software has made the use of these techniques less intimidating for managers, although many still feel anxious about using them. What Is Quality Management? 36 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT MH 5 LEARNING OUTCOME Explain the various theories in the contemporary approach. Contemporary Approaches As we’ve seen, many elements of the earlier approaches to management theory continue to influence how managers manage. Most of these earlier approaches focused on managers’concerns inside the organization. Starting in the 1960s, management researchers began to look at what was happening in the external environment outside the boundaries of the organization. Two contemporary management perspectives—systems and contingency—are part of this approach. Systems theory is a basic theory in the physical sciences, but had never been applied to organized human efforts. In 1938, Chester Barnard, a telephone company executive, first wrote in his book, The Functions of an Executive, that an organization functioned as a cooperative system. However, it wasn’t until the 1960s that management researchers began to look more carefully at systems theory and how it related to organizations. A system is a set of interrelated and interdependent parts arranged in a manner that produces a unified whole. The two basic types of systems are closed and open. Closed systems are not influenced by and do not interact with their environment. In contrast, open systems are influenced by and do interact with their environment. Today, when we describe organizations as systems, we mean open systems. Exhibit MH-7 shows a diagram of an organization from an open systems perspective. As you can see, an organization takes in inputs (resources) from the environment and transforms or processes these resources into outputs that are distributed into the environment. The organization is “open” to and interacts with its environment. How does the systems approach contribute to our understanding of management? Researchers envisioned an organization as being made up of “interdependent factors, including individuals, groups, attitudes, motives, formal structure, interactions, goals, status, and authority.”12 What this means is that as managers coordinate work activities in the various parts of the organization, they ensure that all these parts are working together so the organization’s goals can be achieved. For example, the systems approach recognizes that, no matter how efficient the production department might be, the marketing department must anticipate changes in customer tastes and work with the product development department in creating products customers want or the organization’s overall performance will suffer. EXHIBIT MH-7 Environment Organization as an Open System Organization Inputs Raw Materials Human Resources Capital Technology Information Transformation Process Employees’ Work Activities Management Activities Technology and Operations Methods Feedback Environment Outputs Products and Services Financial Results Information Human Results | MANAGEMENT HISTORY MODULE 37 In addition, the systems approach implies that decisions and actions in one organizational area will affect other areas. For example, if the purchasing department doesn’t acquire the right quantity and quality of inputs, the production department won’t be able to do its job. Finally, the systems approach recognizes that organizations are not selfcontained. They rely on their environment for essential inputs and as outlets to absorb their outputs. No organization can survive for long if it ignores government regulations, supplier relations, or the varied external constituencies upon which it depends. How relevant is the systems approach to management? Quite relevant. Consider, for example, a shift manager at a Starbucks restaurant who must coordinate the work of employees filling customer orders at the front counter and the drive-through windows, direct the delivery and unloading of food supplies, and address any customer concerns that come up. This manager “manages” all parts of the “system” so that the restaurant meets its daily sales goals. The early management theorists came up with management principles that they generally assumed to be universally applicable. Later research found exceptions to many of these principles. For example, division of labor is valuable and widely used, but jobs can become too specialized. Bureaucracy is desirable in many situations, but in other circumstances, other structural designs are more effective. Management is not (and cannot be) based on simplistic principles to be applied in all situations. Different and changing situations require managers to use different approaches and techniques. The contingency approach (sometimes called the situational approach) says that organizations are different, face different situations (contingencies), and require different ways of managing. A good way to describe contingency is “if, then.” If this is the way my situation is, then this is the best way for me to manage in this situation. It’s intuitively logical because organizations and even units within the same organization differ—in size, goals, work activities, and the like. It would be surprising to find universally applicable management rules that would work in all situations. But, of course, it’s one thing to say that the way to manage “depends division of labor (job specialization) principles of management system The breakdown of jobs into narrow and repetitive tasks Fundamental rules of management that could be applied in all organizational situations and taught in schools A set of interrelated and interdependent parts arranged in a manner that produces a unified whole bureaucracy closed system A form of organization characterized by division of labor, a clearly defined hierarchy, detailed rules and regulations, and impersonal relationships Systems that are not influenced by and do not interact with their environment First studies of management, which emphasized rationality and making organizations and workers as efficient as possible organizational behavior (OB) contingency approach scientific management A series of studies during the 1920s and 1930s that provided new insights into individual and group behavior industrial revolution A period during the late eighteenth century when machine power was substituted for human power, making it more economical to manufacture goods in factories than at home classical approach An approach that involves using the scientific method to find the “one best way” for a job to be done therbligs A classification scheme for labeling basic hand motions general administrative theory An approach to management that focuses on describing what managers do and what constitutes good management practice The study of the actions of people at work Hawthorne Studies quantitative approach The use of quantitative techniques to improve decision making total quality management (TQM) A philosophy of management that is driven by continuous improvement and responsiveness to customer needs and expectations open system Systems that interact with their environment A management approach that recognizes organizations as different, which means they face different situations (contingencies) and require different ways of managing 38 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT EXHIBIT MH-8 Popular Contingency Variables Organization Size. As size increases, so do the problems of coordination. For instance, the type of organization structure appropriate for an organization of 50,000 employees is likely to be inefficient for an organization of 50 employees. Routineness of Task Technology. To achieve its purpose, an organization uses technology. Routine technologies require organizational structures, leadership styles, and control systems that differ from those required by customized or nonroutine technologies. Environmental Uncertainty. The degree of uncertainty caused by environmental changes influences the management process. What works best in a stable and predictable environment may be totally inappropriate in a rapidly changing and unpredictable environment. Individual Differences. Individuals differ in terms of their desire for growth, autonomy, tolerance of ambiguity, and expectations. These and other individual differences are particularly important when managers select motivation techniques, leadership styles, and job designs. on the situation” and another to say what the situation is. Management researchers continue working to identify these situational variables. Exhibit MH-8 describes four popular contingency variables. Although the list is by no means comprehensive—more than 100 different variables have been identified—it represents those most widely used and gives you an idea of what we mean by the term contingency variable. The primary value of the contingency approach is that it stresses there are no simplistic or universal rules for managers to follow. So what do managers face today when managing? Although the dawn of the information age is said to have begun with Samuel Morse’s telegraph in 1837, the most dramatic changes in information technology have occurred in the latter part of the twentieth century and have directly affected the manager’s job. Managers now may manage employees who are working from home or working halfway around the world. An organization’s computing resources used to be mainframe computers locked away in temperature-controlled rooms and only accessed by the experts. Now, practically everyone in an organization is connected—wired or wireless—with devices no larger than the palm of the hand. Just like the impact of the Industrial Revolution in the 1700s on the emergence of management, the information age has brought dramatic changes that continue to influence the way organizations are managed. PREPARING FOR: Exams/Quizzes CHAPTER SUMMARY by Learning Outcomes Describe some early management examples. LEARNING OUTCOME MH 1 LEARNING OUTCOME MH 2 LEARNING OUTCOME MH 3 LEARNING OUTCOME MH 4 LEARNING OUTCOME MH Studying history is important because it helps us see the origins of today’s management practices and recognize what has and has not worked. We can see early examples of management practice in the construction of the Egyptian pyramids and in the arsenal of Venice. One important historical event was the publication of Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations, in which he argued the benefits of division of labor (job specialization). Another was the industrial revolution where it became more economical to manufacture in factories than at home. Managers were needed to manage these factories and these managers needed formal management theories to guide them. Explain the various theories in the classical approach. Frederick W. Taylor, known as the “father” of scientific management, studied manual work using scientific principles—that is, guidelines for improving production efficiency—to find the one best way to do those jobs. The Gilbreths’ primary contribution was finding efficient hand-and-body motions and designing proper tools and equipment for optimizing work performance. Fayol believed that the functions of management were common to all business endeavors but also were distinct from other business functions. He developed 14 principles of management from which many current management concepts have evolved. Weber described an ideal type of organization he called a bureaucracy, characteristics that many of today’s large organizations still have. Today’s managers use the concepts of scientific management when they analyze basic work tasks to be performed, use time-and-motion study to eliminate wasted motions, hire the best qualified workers for a job, and design incentive systems based on output. They use general administrative theory when they perform the functions of management and structure their organizations so that resources are used efficiently and effectively. Discuss the development and uses of the behavioral approach. The early OB advocates (Robert Owen, Hugo Munsterberg, Mary Parker Follett, and Chester Barnard) contributed various ideas, but all believed that people were the most important asset of the organization and should be managed accordingly. The Hawthorne Studies dramatically affected management beliefs about the role of people in organizations, leading to a new emphasis on the human behavior factor in managing. The behavioral approach has largely shaped how today’s organizations are managed. Many current theories of motivation, leadership, group behavior and development, and other behavioral issues can be traced to the early OB advocates and the conclusions from the Hawthorne Studies. Describe the quantitative approach. The quantitative approach involves applications of statistics, optimization models, information models, and computer simulations to management activities. Today’s managers use the quantitative approach, especially when making decisions, as they plan and control work activities such as allocating resources, improving quality, scheduling work, or determining optimum inventory levels. Total quality management—a management philosophy devoted to continual improvement and responding to customer needs and expectations— also makes use of quantitative methods to meet its goals. Explain the various theories in the contemporary approach. 5 The systems approach says that an organization takes in inputs (resources) from the environment and transforms or processes these resources into outputs that are distributed into the environment. This approach provides a framework to help managers understand 39 40 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT how all the interdependent units work together in order to achieve the organization’s goals and that decisions and actions taken in one organizational area will affect others. In this way, managers can recognize that organizations are not self-contained, but instead rely on their environment for essential inputs and as outlets to absorb their outputs. The contingency approach says that organizations are different, face different situations, and require different ways of managing. It helps us understand management because it stresses there are no simplistic or universal rules for managers to follow. Instead, managers must look at their situation and determine that if this is the way my situation is, then this is the best way for me to manage. MH.1 MH.5 REVIEW AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Explain why studying management history is important. What early evidence of management practice can you describe? Describe the important contributions made by the classical theorists. What did the early advocates of OB contribute to our understanding of management? Why were the Hawthorne Studies so critical to management history? What kind of workplace would Henri Fayol create? How about Mary Parker Follett? How about Frederick W. Taylor? Explain what the quantitative approach has contributed to the field of management. Describe total quality management. How do systems theory and the contingency approach make managers better at what they do? How do societal trends influence the practice of management? What are the implications for someone studying management? PREPARING FOR: My Career MY TURN TO BE A MANAGER Choose two nonmanagement classes that you are currently enrolled in or have taken previously. Describe three ideas and concepts from those subject areas that might help you be a better manager. Read at least one current business article from any of the popular business periodicals each week for four weeks. Describe what each of the four articles is about and how each relates to any (or all) of the four approaches to management. Choose an organization with which you are familiar and describe the job specialization used there. Is it efficient and effective? Why or why not? How could it be improved? Can scientific management principles help you be more efficient? Choose a task that you do regularly (such as laundry, fixing dinner, grocery shopping, studying for exams, etc.). Analyze it by writing down the steps involved in completing that task. See if there are activities that could be combined or eliminated. Find the “one best way” to do this task! And the next time you have to do the task, try the scientifically managed way! See if you become more efficient (keeping in mind that changing habits isn’t easy to do). How do business organizations survive for 100+ years? Obviously, they’ve seen a lot of historical events come and go! Choose one of these companies and research | MANAGEMENT HISTORY MODULE their history: Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble, Avon, or General Electric. How has it changed over the years? From your research on this company, what did you learn that could help you be a better manager? Find the current top five best-selling management books. Read a review of the book or the book covers (or even the book!). Write a short paragraph describing what each book is about. Also, write about which of the historical management approaches you think the book fits into and how you think it fits into that approach. Pick one historical event from this century and do some research on it. Write a paper describing the impact that this event might be having or has had on how workplaces are managed. Steve’s and Mary’s suggested readings: Gary Hamel, The Future of Management (Harvard Business School Press, 2007); Malcolm Gladwell, Blink (Little, Brown and Company, 2005); James C. Collins, Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap . . . and Others Don’t (Harper Business, 2001); Matthew J. Kiernan, The Eleven Commandments of 21st Century Management (Prentice Hall, 1996); and James C. Collins and Jerry I. Porras, Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies (Harper Business, 1994). Come on, admit it. You multitask, don’t you? And if not, you probably know people who do. Multitasking is also common in the workplace. But does it make employees more efficient and effective? Pretend you’re the manager in charge of a loan processing department. Describe how you would research this issue using each of the following management approaches or theories: scientific management, general administrative theory, quantitative approach, behavioral approach, systems theory, and contingency theory. In your own words, write down three things you learned in this module about being a good manager. Self-knowledge can be a powerful learning tool. Go to mymanagementlab.com and complete any of these self-assessment exercises: How Well Do I Respond to Turbulent Change? How Well Do I Handle Ambiguity? and What Do I Value? Using the results of your assessments, identify personal strengths and weaknesses. What will you do to reinforce your strengths and improve your weaknesses? 41 2 chapter Let’s Get Real: Meet the Manager Dana Robbins-Murray Account Director Caliber Group Tucson, AZ MY JOB: You’ll be hearing more from this real manager throughout the chapter. I am an account director for Caliber Group, a full-service marketing/PR firm. My main responsibility is to work with our clients to determine what type of marketing or public relations they need to create better brand awareness and increase sales for their business. BEST PART OF MY JOB: Working with a large, diverse group of businesses that each have their own unique competitive environment, products or services to sell, and management style. Understanding Management’s Context: Constraints and Challenges 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Contrast the actions of managers according to the omnipotent and symbolic views. page 44 Describe the constraints and challenges facing managers in today’s external environment. page 46 Discuss the characteristics and importance of organizational culture. page 51 Describe current issues in organizational culture. page 58 LEARNING OUTCOMES WORST PART OF MY JOB: Budgets. In business, as in life, there are always budget limitations that we have to work within and still accomplish our goals. BEST MANAGEMENT ADVICE EVER RECEIVED: From my first boss—handle each piece of paper once. In the age of electronic correspondence you can relate this to e-mails as well. Basically the idea is to try to handle everything the first time around, so as not to waste time and energy. It’s a hard mantra to practice but it’s worthwhile if you can do it, at least most of the time. 43 A Manager’s Dilemma “Trial by ice.” That’s how one analyst significant piece in that process has been the com- described the aftermath of the 2007 pany’s culture, which has developed around five key Valentine’s Day ice and snowstorm values: safety, caring, integrity, fun, and passion. that dealt a crushing blow to JetBlue CEO Dave Barger (on left in photo) knows how Airways operations.1 With passengers important an organization’s culture can be. He says, stranded for hours on its planes stuck “The hard product—airplanes, leather seats, satellite on runways and some 1,000 of its TVs, bricks and mortar—as long as you have a flights cancelled, the resulting uproar checkbook, they can be replicated. It’s the culture from customers and from airline reg- that can’t be replicated. . . . The human side of the ulators forced the company to take a equation is the most important thing we’re doing.” long hard look at itself. It was definitely As JetBlue continues to grow, even during rough a low point for JetBlue. Fast forward economic times, how can managers ensure that its three years. JetBlue did everything it culture continues? could to learn from that experience and to make itself better. A critical and What Would You Do? Here’s a company that recognizes how important culture is! JetBlue created a culture in which employees are treated with respect and are viewed as a core strategic asset. Since that almost catastrophic collapse of its system in 2007, the company has topped all airlines in J.D. Power’s annual customer-service survey for five years running. Undoubtedly, its employees and the culture they work in have played a key role in that accomplishment. In this chapter, we’re going to look at culture and other important aspects of management’s context. We’ll examine the challenges in the external environment and discuss the characteristics of organizational culture. But before we address these topics, we first need to look at two perspectives on how much impact managers actually have on an organization’s success or failure. 2.1 LEARNING OUTCOME Contrast the actions of managers according to the omnipotent and symbolic views. The Manager: Omnipotent or Symbolic? In February 2010, when Ford Motor Company surpassed General Motors in sales for the first time in at least 50 years, GM announced an overhaul in its top managers’ ranks. GM’s North American president said that “he could see clear as day that the mix and the structure of people weren’t right and that these changes were necessary for GM to move faster and win.”2 Such a move shuffling managers is not all that uncommon in the corporate world, but why? How much difference does a manager make in how an organization performs? The dominant view in management theory and society in general is that managers are directly responsible for an organization’s success or failure. We call this perspective the omnipotent view of management. In contrast, others have argued that much of an organization’s success or failure is due to external forces outside managers’ control. This perspective is called the symbolic view of management. Let’s look at each perspective to try and clarify just how much credit or blame managers should get for their organization’s performance. The Omnipotent View In Chapter 1, we stressed how important managers were to organizations. Differences in an organization’s performance are assumed to be due to decisions and actions of its managers. Good managers anticipate change, exploit opportunities, correct poor 44 CHAPTER 2 | UNDERSTANDING MANAGEMENT'S CONTEXT performance, and lead their organizations. When profits are up, managers take the credit and are rewarded with bonuses, stock options, and the like. When profits are down, top managers are often fired in the belief that “new blood” will bring improved results. For instance, the CEO of Cott Corporation was fired because some of its largest customers were threatening to leave and the company’s share prices had declined sharply.3 In this view, someone has to be held accountable when organizations perform poorly regardless of the reasons, and that “someone” is the manager. Of course, when things go well, managers also get the credit—even if they had little to do with achieving the positive outcomes. This view of managers as omnipotent is consistent with the stereotypical picture of the take-charge business executive who overcomes any obstacle in seeing that the organization achieves its goals. And this view isn’t limited to business organizations. It also explains turnover among college and professional sports coaches, who are considered the “managers” of their teams. Coaches who lose more games than they win are usually fired and replaced by new coaches who are expected to correct the poor performance. The Symbolic View In the 1990s, Cisco Systems was the picture of success. Growing rapidly, it was widely praised by analysts for its “brilliant strategy, masterful management of acquisitions and superb customer focus.”4 As Cisco’s performance declined during the early part of the twenty-first century, analysts said that its strategy was flawed, its acquisition approach was haphazard, and its customer service was poor. Was declining performance due to the managers’ decisions and actions, or was it due to external circumstances beyond their control? The symbolic view would suggest the latter. The symbolic view says that a manager’s ability to affect performance outcomes is influenced and constrained by external factors.5 According to this view, it’s unreasonable to expect managers to significantly affect an organization’s performance. Instead, performance is influenced by factors over which managers have little control such as the economy, customers, governmental policies, competitors’ actions, industry conditions, and decisions made by previous managers. This view is labeled “symbolic” because it’s based on the belief that managers symbolize control and influence.6 How do they do that? By developing plans, making decisions, and engaging in other managerial activities to make sense out of random, confusing, and ambiguous situations. However, the actual part that managers play in organizational success or failure is limited according to this view. In reality, managers are neither all-powerful nor helpless. But their decisions and actions are constrained. As you can see in Exhibit 2-1, external constraints come from the organization’s environment and internal constraints come from the organization’s culture. EXHIBIT 2-1 Organizational Environment Managerial Discretion Organizational Culture omnipotent view of management symbolic view of management The view that managers are directly responsible for an organization’s success or failure The view that much of an organization’s success or failure is due to external forces outside managers’ control Constraints on Managerial Discretion 45 46 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT 2.2 LEARNING OUTCOME Describe the constraints and challenges facing managers in today’s external environment. The External Environment: Constraints and Challenges Despite the fact that appliance sales are expected to climb for the first time in four years, Whirlpool Corporation, which already shut down 10 percent of its production capacity, continues to cut costs and scale down capacity even more.7 And it’s not alone in its protective, defensive actions. The decade from 2000 to 2009 was a challenging one for organizations. For instance, some well-known stand-alone businesses at the beginning of the decade were acquired by other companies during this time, including Compaq (now a part of Hewlett-Packard), Gillette (now a part of Procter & Gamble), Anheuser-Busch (now a part of Anheuser-Busch InBev), and Merrill Lynch (now a part of Bank of America); others disappeared altogether, including Lehman Brothers, Circuit City, and Steve & Barry’s (all now bankrupt) and WorldCom and Enron (both done in by ethics scandals).8 Anyone who doubts the impact the external environment has on managing just needs to look at what’s happened during the last decade. The term external environment refers to factors and forces outside the organization that affect its performance. As shown in Exhibit 2-2, it includes several different components. The economic component encompasses factors such as interest rates, inflation, changes in disposable income, stock market fluctuations, and business cycle stages. The demographic component is concerned with trends in population characteristics such as age, race, gender, education level, geographic location, income, and family composition. The political/legal component looks at federal, state, and local laws, as well as global laws and laws of other countries. It also includes a country’s political conditions and stability. The sociocultural component is concerned with societal and cultural factors such as values, attitudes, trends, traditions, lifestyles, beliefs, tastes, and patterns of behavior. The technological component is concerned with scientific or industrial innovations. And the global component encompasses those issues associated with globalization and a world economy. Although all these components pose potential constraints on managers’ decisions and actions, we’re going to take a closer look at two of them—the economic and demographic aspects. Then, we’ll look at how changes taking place in those components constrain managers and organizations. We’ll wrap up this section by examining environmental uncertainty and stakeholder relationships. EXHIBIT 2-2 Components of External Environment ic om on c E Glo ba l tical/Legal ographics Dem Poli The Organization a ur ult c o i Soc l Te ch no log ica l CHAPTER 2 | UNDERSTANDING MANAGEMENT'S CONTEXT The Working World in 2020 More Diverse Than Ever Miami, more than a third of the population will be working to avoid financial strains. In fact, we wo of the largest changes that we see Hispanic. These general population percentages saw this happening in the recession that began happening in the makeup of the workforce should translate equivalently to the labor force. The in 2008. Individuals who would like to have T in 2020 in the United States will be a sig- likelihood that you’ll have a coworker whose first stepped away from their 8-to-5 jobs were happy to have a job and held onto that job. nificant increase in Hispanic and senior-citizen language is Spanish will be quite high. participation. You can also expect to see a graying of the Now, envision that workplace where you’ll also Hispanic-Americans are the fastest-growing workforce. By 2020, retiring at age 62 or 65 likely to be working with many older (age 65+) segment of the U.S. population. They currently will have become passé. People are living coworkers. Again, these two demographic changes foremake up 15 percent of the population, although longer and enjoying good health well into their tell a workplace in which as a manager or as 70s. Those who enjoy being actively engaged that number is forecasted to increase to 20 percent by 2025. In the southern part of the United in a job won’t want to give that up. On the other States, the percentages will be higher. In cities hand, there also will be those senior citizens coworkers, you’re going to be interacting and working with others who may not think or act or do such as Los Angeles, Phoenix, Tucson, El Paso, and who can’t afford to retire and have to continue things the way you would. The Economic Environment You know the economic context has changed when a blue-ribbon company like General Motors declares bankruptcy; the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development predicts some 25 million unemployed individuals globally; 8.4 million jobs in the United States vanish; and the economic vocabulary includes terminology such as toxic assets, collateralized debt obligations, TARP, bailouts, economic stabilization, wraparound mortgages, and stress tests.9 To understand what this economic environment is like, we need to look at the changes that have taken place and the impact of those changes on the way organizations are managed. The economic crisis—called the “Great Recession” by some analysts—began with turmoil in home mortgage markets in the United States when many homeowners found themselves unable to make their payments. The problems soon affected businesses as credit markets collapsed. All of a sudden, credit was no longer readily available to fund business activities. It didn’t take long for these economic troubles to spread worldwide. What caused these massive problems? Experts cite a long list of factors that include excessively low interest rates for a long period of time, fundamental flaws in the U.S. housing market, and massive global liquidity. Businesses and consumers became highly leveraged, which wasn’t an issue when credit was easily available.10 However, as liquidity dried up, the worldwide economic system sputtered and very nearly collapsed. Now, massive foreclosures, a huge public debt burden in many countries, and continuing widespread social problems from job losses signal clear changes in the U.S. and global economic environments. Even as global economies began the slow process of recovery, most experts believed that the economic environment facing managers and organizations would not be as it was and would continue to constrain organizational decisions and actions. The Demographic Environment Baby Boomers. Gen Y. Post-Millennials. Maybe you’ve heard or seen these terms before. Population researchers refer to three of the more well-known age groups found in the U.S. population by these terms. Baby Boomers are those individuals born between 1946 and 1964. external environment Those factors and forces outside the organization that affect its performance During the recession, my company has had to be more aggressive and spend more time selling our services and differentiating ourselves from the competition. 47 48 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT So much is written and reported about “boomers” because there are so many of them. The sheer numbers of people in that cohort means they’ve significantly affected every aspect of the external environment (from the educational system to entertainment/lifestyle choices to the Social Security system and so forth) as they cycle through the various life stages. Gen Y (or the “Millennials”) is typically considered to encompass those individuals born between 1978 and 1994. As the children of the Baby Boomers, this age group is also large in number and making its imprint on external environmental conditions as well. From technology to clothing styles to work attitudes, Gen Y is affecting organizational workplaces. Then, we have the Post-Millennials—the youngest identified age group—basically teens and middle-schoolers.11 This group has also been called the iGeneration, primarily because they’ve grown up with technology that customizes everything to the individual. Population experts say it’s too early to tell whether elementary school-aged children and younger are part of this demographic group or whether the world they live in will be so different that they’ll comprise a different demographic cohort. Demographic age cohorts are important to our study of management because, as we said earlier, large numbers of people at certain stages in the life cycle can constrain decisions and actions taken by businesses, governments, educational institutions, and other organizations. But demographics doesn’t only look at current statistics, it also looks to the future. For instance, recent analysis of birth rates shows that more than 80 percent of babies being born worldwide are from Africa and Asia.12 And here’s an interesting fact: India has one of the world’s youngest populations with more males under the age of 5 than the entire population of France. And by 2050, it’s predicted that China will have more people age 65 and older than the rest of the world combined.13 Consider the impact of such population trends on organizations and managers in the future. How the External Environment Affects Managers Knowing what the various components of the external environment are and examining certain aspects of that environment are important to managers. However, understanding how the environment affects managers is equally as important. We’re going to look at three ways the environment constrains and challenges managers—first, through its impact on jobs and employment; next, through the environmental uncertainty that is present; and finally, through the various stakeholder relationships that exist between an organization and its external constituencies. JOBS AND EMPLOYMENT As any or all external environmental conditions (economic, demographic, technological, globalization, etc.) change, one of the most powerful constraints managers face is the impact of such changes on jobs and employment—both in poor conditions and in good conditions. The power of this constraint became painfully obvious during the recent global recession as millions of jobs were eliminated and unemployment rates rose to levels not seen in many years. Economists now predict that about a quarter of the 8.4 million jobs eliminated in the United States during this most recent economic downturn won’t be coming back and will instead be replaced by other types of work in growing industries.14 Other countries face the same issues. Although such readjustments aren’t bad in and of themselves, they do create challenges for managers who must balance work demands and having enough of the right types of people with the right skills to do the organization’s work. Not only do changes in external conditions affect the types of jobs that are available, they affect how those jobs are created and managed. For instance, many employers use flexible work arrangements to meet work output demand.15 For instance, work tasks may be done by freelancers hired to work on an as-needed basis or by temporary workers who work full-time but are not permanent employees or by individuals who share jobs. Keep in mind that such responses have come about because of the constraints from the external environment. As a manager, you’ll need to recognize how these work arrangements affect the way you plan, organize, lead, and control. This whole issue of flexible work arrangements has become so prevalent and part of how work is done in organizations that we’ll address it in other chapters as well. CHAPTER 2 | UNDERSTANDING MANAGEMENT'S CONTEXT EXHIBIT 2-3 Degree of Change Simple Degree of Complexity Dynamic Cell 1 Stable and predictable environment Few components in environment Components are somewhat similar and remain basically the same Minimal need for sophisticated knowledge of components Cell 2 Dynamic and unpredictable environment Few components in environment Components are somewhat similar but are continually changing Minimal need for sophisticated knowledge of components Complex Stable Cell 3 Stable and predictable environment Many components in environment Components are not similar to one another and remain basically the same High need for sophisticated knowledge of components Cell 4 Dynamic and unpredictable environment Many components in environment Components are not similar to one another and are continually changing High need for sophisticated knowledge of components ASSESSING ENVIRONMENTAL UNCERTAINTY Another constraint posed by external environments is the amount of uncertainty found in that environment, which can affect organizational outcomes. Environmental uncertainty refers to the degree of change and complexity in an organization’s environment. The matrix in Exhibit 2-3 shows these two aspects. The first dimension of uncertainty is the degree of change. If the components in an organization’s environment change frequently, it’s a dynamic environment. If change is minimal, it’s a stable one. A stable environment might be one with no new competitors, few technological breakthroughs by current competitors, little activity by pressure groups to influence the organization, and so forth. For instance, Zippo Manufacturing, best known for its Zippo lighters, faces a relatively stable environment, with few competitors and little technological change. The main external concern for the company is probably the declining numbers of tobacco smokers, although the company’s lighters have other uses and global markets remain attractive. In contrast, the recorded music industry faces a dynamic (highly uncertain and unpredictable) environment. Digital formats and music-downloading sites turned the industry upside down and brought high levels of uncertainty. If change is predictable, is that considered dynamic? No. Think of department stores that typically make one-quarter to one-third of their sales in November and December. The drop-off from December to January is significant. But because the change is predictable, the environment isn’t considered dynamic. When we talk about degree of change, we mean change that’s unpredictable. If change can be accurately anticipated, it’s not an uncertainty for managers. The other dimension of uncertainty describes the degree of environmental complexity, which looks at the number of components in an organization’s environment and the extent of the knowledge that the organization has about those components. An organization with fewer competitors, customers, suppliers, government agencies, and so forth faces a less complex and uncertain environment. Organizations deal with environmental complexity in various environmental uncertainty environmental complexity The degree of change and complexity in an organization’s environment The number of components in an organization’s environment and the extent of the organization’s knowledge about those components Environmental Uncertainty Matrix 49 50 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT Hot Topic CEO Betsy McLaughlin has a way with words and a way of knowing what an “audience” needs.16 At the closing session of one of the retailer’s annual store manager meetings a few years ago, she rapidly spouted off George Carlin’s famous “Seven Dirty Words” . . . something she had practiced for days. Her employees roared in approval! It’s probably not too many CEOs that would use that monologue as closing comments even if it was in front of coworkers. But that’s McLaughlin’s style and her style has propelled her company to retail success. Hot Topic is definitely not mainstream, but neither is McLaughlin. One coworker describes her as “all fun and all business. On a scale of 1 to 10, McLaughlin is an 11 in fun and a 13 in business.” One thing that McLaughlin excels at is her ability to take in and read the environment and to understand the demands of various stakeholders. When she travels for work, she is constantly getting inspiration by paying attention to her environment. It’s a lesson that all managers can learn from, even if George Carlin isn’t your cup of tea! ways. For example, Hasbro Toy Company simplified its environment by acquiring many of its competitors. Complexity is also measured in terms of the knowledge an organization needs about its environment. For instance, managers at E*Trade must know a great deal about their Internet service provider’s operations if they want to ensure that their Web site is available, reliable, and secure for their customers. On the other hand, managers of college bookstores have a minimal need for sophisticated knowledge about their suppliers. How does the concept of environmental uncertainty influence managers? Looking again at Exhibit 2-3, each of the four cells represents different combinations of degree of complexity and degree of change. Cell 1 (stable and simple environment) represents the lowest level of environmental uncertainty and cell 4 (dynamic and complex environment) the highest. Not surprisingly, managers have the greatest influence on organizational outcomes in cell 1 and the least in cell 4. Because uncertainty poses a threat to an organization’s effectiveness, managers try to minimize it. Given a choice, managers would prefer to operate in the least uncertain environments. However, they rarely control that choice. In addition, the nature of the external environment today is that most industries today are facing more dynamic change, making their environments more uncertain. MANAGING STAKEHOLDER RELATIONSHIPS What makes MTV a popular cable channel for young adults year after year? One factor is its success in building relationships with its various stakeholders: viewers, music celebrities, advertisers, affiliate TV stations, public service groups, and others. The nature of stakeholder relationships is another way in which the environment influences managers. The more obvious and secure these relationships, the more influence managers will have over organizational outcomes. Stakeholders are any constituencies in the organization’s environment that are affected by an organization’s decisions and actions. These groups have a stake in or are significantly influenced by what the organization does. In turn, these groups can influence the organization. For example, think of the groups that might be affected by the decisions and actions of Starbucks—coffee bean farmers, employees, specialty coffee competitors, local communities, and so forth. Some of these stakeholders also, in turn, may influence decisions and actions of Starbucks’ managers. The idea that organizations have stakeholders is now widely accepted by both management academics and practicing managers.17 Exhibit 2-4 identifies some of an organization’s most common stakeholders. Note that these stakeholders include internal and external groups. Why? Because both can affect what an organization does and how it operates. Why should managers even care about managing stakeholder relationships?18 For one thing, it can lead to desirable organizational outcomes such as improved predictability of environmental changes, more successful innovations, greater degree of trust among stakeholders, and greater organizational flexibility to reduce the impact of change. But does it affect organizational performance? The answer is yes! Management researchers who have looked at this issue are finding that managers of high-performing companies tend to consider the interests of all major stakeholder groups as they make decisions.19 Another reason for managing external stakeholder relationships is that it’s the “right” thing to do. Because an organization depends on these external groups as sources of inputs (resources) and as outlets for outputs (goods and services), managers need to consider their CHAPTER 2 | UNDERSTANDING MANAGEMENT'S CONTEXT 51 EXHIBIT 2-4 Organizational Stakeholders Employees Customers Social and Political Action Groups Unions Shareholders Competitors Organization Trade and Industry Associations Communities Suppliers Governments Media interests as they make decisions. We’ll address this issue in more detail in the chapter on corporate social responsibility. Organizational Culture: Constraints and Challenges Each of us has a unique personality—traits and characteristics that influence the way we act and interact with others. When we describe someone as warm, open, relaxed, shy, or aggressive, we’re describing personality traits. An organization, too, has a personality, which we call its culture. And that culture influences the way employees act and interact with others. 2.3 LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss the characteristics and importance of organizational culture. What Is Organizational Culture? Like JetBlue in our chapter opener, W. L. Gore & Associates, a company known for its innovative and high-quality fabrics used in outdoor wear and other products, also understands the importance of organizational culture. Since its founding in 1958, Gore has used employee teams in a flexible, nonhierarchical organizational arrangement to develop its innovative products. Associates (employees) at Gore are committed to four basic principles articulated by company founder Bill Gore: (1) fairness to one another and everyone you come in contact with; (2) freedom to encourage, help, and allow other associates to grow in knowledge, skill, and scope of responsibility; (3) the ability to make your own commitments and keep them; and (4) consulting other associates before taking actions that could affect the company’s reputation. After a visit to the company, one analyst reported that an associate told him, “If you tell anybody what to do here, they’ll never work for you again.” That’s the type of independent, people-oriented culture Bill Gore wanted. And it works well for the company—it’s earned a position on Fortune’s annual list of “100 Best Companies to Work For” every year since the list began in 1998, one of only three companies to achieve that distinction.20 stakeholders Any constituencies in the organization’s environment that are affected by an organization’s decisions and actions To me, organizational culture is the environment and attitudes within the business. It is an organic entity and takes time to change. 52 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT EXHIBIT 2-5 Dimensions of Organizational Culture Degree to which employees are expected to exhibit precision, analysis, and attention to detail Degree to which employees are encouraged to be innovative and to take risks Degree to which managers focus on results or outcomes rather than on how these outcomes are achieved Attention to Detail Innovation and Risk Taking Outcome Orientation Organizational Culture People Orientation Stability Degree to which organizational decisions and actions emphasize maintaining the status quo Aggressiveness Degree to which employees are aggressive and competitive rather than cooperative Degree to which management decisions take into account the effects on people in the organization Team Orientation Degree to which work is organized around teams rather than individuals Organizational culture has been described as the shared values, principles, traditions, and ways of doing things that influence the way organizational members act. In most organizations, these shared values and practices have evolved over time and determine, to a large extent, how “things are done around here.”21 Our definition of culture implies three things. First, culture is a perception. It’s not something that can be physically touched or seen, but employees perceive it on the basis of what they experience within the organization. Second, organizational culture is descriptive. It’s concerned with how members perceive the culture and describe it, not with whether they like it. Finally, even though individuals may have different backgrounds or work at different organizational levels, they tend to describe the organization’s culture in similar terms. That’s the shared aspect of culture. Research suggests seven dimensions that can be used to describe an organization’s culture.22 These dimensions (shown in Exhibit 2-5) range from low to high, meaning it’s not very typical of the culture (low) or is very typical of the culture (high). Describing an organization using these seven dimensions gives a composite picture of the organization’s culture. In many organizations, one cultural dimension often is emphasized more than the others and essentially shapes the organization’s personality and the way organizational members work. For instance, at Sony Corporation the focus is product innovation (innovation and risk taking). The company “lives and breathes” new product development and employees’ work behaviors support that goal. In contrast, Southwest Airlines has made its employees a central part of its culture (people orientation). Exhibit 2-6 describes how the dimensions can create significantly different cultures. Strong Cultures All organizations have cultures, but not all cultures equally influence employees’ behaviors and actions. Strong cultures—those in which the key values are deeply held and widely shared—have a greater influence on employees than do weaker cultures. CHAPTER 2 | UNDERSTANDING MANAGEMENT'S CONTEXT EXHIBIT 2-6 Organization A This organization is a manufacturing firm. Managers are expected to fully document all decisions, and “good managers” are those who can provide detailed data to support their recommendations. Creative decisions that incur significant change or risk are not encouraged. Because managers of failed projects are openly criticized and penalized, managers try not to implement ideas that deviate much from the status quo. One lower-level manager quoted an often-used phrase in the company: “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” Employees are required to follow extensive rules and regulations in this firm. Managers supervise employees closely to ensure that there are no deviations. Management is concerned with high productivity, regardless of the impact on employee morale or turnover. Work activities are designed around individuals. There are distinct departments and lines of authority, and employees are expected to minimize formal contact with other employees outside their functional area or line of command. Performance evaluations and rewards emphasize individual effort, although seniority tends to be the primary factor in the determination of pay raises and promotions. Contrasting Organizational Cultures Organization B This organization is also a manufacturing firm. Here, however, management encourages and rewards risk taking and change. Decisions based on intuition are valued as much as those that are well rationalized. Management prides itself on its history of experimenting with new technologies and its success in regularly introducing innovative products. Managers or employees who have a good idea are encouraged to “run with it,” and failures are treated as “learning experiences.” The company prides itself on being market driven and rapidly responsive to the changing needs of its customers. There are few rules and regulations for employees to follow, and supervision is loose because management believes that its employees are hardworking and trustworthy. Management is concerned with high productivity but believes that this comes through treating its people right. The company is proud of its reputation as being a good place to work. Job activities are designed around work teams, and team members are encouraged to interact with people across functions and authority levels. Employees talk positively about the competition between teams. Individuals and teams have goals, and bonuses are based on achievement of outcomes. Employees are given considerable autonomy in choosing the means by which the goals are attained. (Exhibit 2-7 contrasts strong and weak cultures.) The more employees accept the organization’s key values and the greater their commitment to those values, the stronger the culture is. Most organizations have moderate to strong cultures; that is, there is relatively high agreement on what’s important, what defines “good” employee behavior, what it takes to get ahead, and so forth. The stronger a culture becomes, the more it affects the way managers plan, organize, lead, and control.23 Strong Cultures Weak Cultures Values widely shared Values limited to a few people—usually top management Culture conveys consistent messages about what’s important Culture sends contradictory messages about what’s important Most employees can tell stories about company history or heroes Employees have little knowledge of company history or heroes Employees strongly identify with culture Employees have little identification with culture Strong connection between shared values and behaviors Little connection between shared values and behaviors organizational culture strong cultures The shared values, principles, traditions, and ways of doing things that influence the way organizational members act Organizational cultures in which the key values are intensely held and widely shared EXHIBIT 2-7 Strong Versus Weak Cultures 53 54 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT EXHIBIT 2-8 Establishing and Maintaining Culture Top Management Philosophy of Organization's Founders Selection Criteria Organization's Culture Socialization Why is having a strong culture important? For one thing, in organizations with strong cultures, employees are more loyal than are employees in organizations with weak cultures.24 Research also suggests that strong cultures are associated with high organizational performance.25 And it’s easy to understand why. After all, if values are clear and widely accepted, employees know what they’re supposed to do and what’s expected of them, so they can act quickly to take care of problems. However, the drawback is that a strong culture also might prevent employees from trying new approaches especially when conditions are changing rapidly.26 Where Culture Comes From and How It Continues Exhibit 2-8 illustrates how an organization’s culture is established and maintained. The original source of the culture usually reflects the vision of the founders. For instance, as we described earlier, W. L. Gore’s culture reflects the values of founder Bill Gore. Company founders are not constrained by previous customs or approaches and can establish the early culture by articulating a vision of what they want the organization to be. Also, the small size of most new organizations makes it easier to instill that vision with all organizational members. Once the culture is in place, however, certain organizational practices help maintain it. For instance, during the employee selection process, managers typically judge job candidates not only on the job requirements, but also on how well they might fit into the organization. At the same time, job candidates find out information about the organization and determine whether they are comfortable with what they see. The actions of top managers also have a major impact on the organization’s culture. For instance, at Best Buy, the company’s chief marketing officer would take groups of employees for “regular tours of what the company called its retail hospital.” Wearing white lab coats, employees would walk into a room with a row of real hospital beds and patient charts describing the ills affecting each of the company’s major competitors. Now that each of those competitors has “succumbed to terminal illness” and is no longer in business, the room is darkened. Just think of the powerful message such a display would have on employees and their work.27 Through what they say and how they behave, top managers establish norms that filter down through the organization and can have a positive effect on employees’ behaviors. For instance, IBM’s CEO Sam Palmisano wanted employees to value teamwork so he chose to take several million dollars from his yearly bonus and give it to his top executives based on their teamwork. He said, “If you say you’re about a team, you have to be a team. You’ve got to walk the talk, right?”28 However, as we’ve seen in numerous corporate ethics scandals, the actions of top managers also can lead to undesirable outcomes. Finally, organizations help employees adapt to the culture through socialization, a process that helps new employees learn the organization’s way of doing things. For instance, new employees at Starbucks stores go through 24 hours of intensive training that helps turn them into brewing consultants (baristas). They learn company philosophy, company jargon, and even how to assist customers with decisions about beans, grind, and espresso machines. CHAPTER 2 | UNDERSTANDING MANAGEMENT'S CONTEXT One benefit of socialization is that employees understand the culture and are enthusiastic and knowledgeable with customers.29 Another benefit is that it minimizes the chance that new employees who are unfamiliar with the organization’s culture might disrupt current beliefs and customs. How Employees Learn Culture Employees “learn” an organization’s culture in a number of ways. The most common are stories, rituals, material symbols, and language. STORIES Organizational “stories” typically contain a narrative of significant events or people including such things as the organization’s founders, rule breaking, reactions to past mistakes, and so forth.30 Managers at Southwest Airlines tell stories celebrating employees who perform heroically for customers.31 Such stories help convey what’s important and provide examples that people can learn from. At 3M Company, the product innovation stories are legendary. There’s the story about the 3M scientist who spilled chemicals on her tennis shoe and came up with Scotchgard. Then, there’s the story about Art Fry, a 3M researcher, who wanted a better way to mark the pages of his church hymnal and invented the Post-It Note. These stories reflect what made 3M great and what it will take to continue that success.32 To help employees learn the culture, organizational stories anchor the present in the past, provide explanations and legitimacy for current practices, exemplify what is important to the organization, and provide compelling pictures of an organization’s goals.33 RITUALS In the early days of Facebook, founder Mark Zuckerberg had an artist paint a mural at company headquarters showing children taking over the world with laptops. Also, he would end employee meetings by pumping his fist in the air and leading employees in a chant of “domination.” Although the cheering ritual was intended to be something simply fun, other company executives suggested he drop it because it made him seem silly and they feared that competitors might cite it as evidence of monopolistic goals.34 That’s the power that rituals can have in shaping what employees believe is important. Corporate rituals are repetitive sequences of activities that express and reinforce the important values and goals of the organization. One of the best-known corporate rituals is Mary Kay Cosmetics’ annual awards ceremony for its sales representatives. Looking like a cross between a circus and a Miss America pageant, the ceremony takes place in a large auditorium, on a stage in front of a large, cheering audience, with all the participants dressed in glamorous evening clothes. Salespeople are rewarded for sales goal achievements with an array of expensive gifts including gold and diamond pins, furs, and pink Cadillacs. This “show” acts as a motivator by publicly acknowledging outstanding sales performance. In addition, the ritual aspect reinforces late founder Mary Kay’s determination and optimism, which enabled her to overcome personal hardships, start her own company, and achieve material success. It conveys to her salespeople that reaching their sales goals is important and through hard work and encouragement, they too can achieve success. The contagious enthusiasm and excitement of Mary Kay sales representatives make it obvious that this annual “ritual” plays a significant role in establishing desired levels of motivation and behavioral expectations, which is, after all, what management hopes an organization’s culture does. MATERIAL ARTIFACTS AND SYMBOLS When you walk into different businesses, do you get a “feel” for what type of work environment it is—formal, casual, fun, serious, and so forth? These reactions demonstrate the power of material symbols or artifacts in creating an organization’s personality.35 The layout of an organization’s facilities, how employees socialization The process that helps employees adapt to the organization’s culture Our employees learn our company’s culture by observing and interacting. 55 56 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT At Mary Kay Cosmetics, celebrations honoring employee achievements are rituals that help shape what employees believe is important. In addition to its annual awards ceremony, the company repeatedly honors employees who set personal goals and work hard to achieve them. In this photo, coworkers present a beautiful flower bouquet to Hao Xiaojuan during a party marking her being named National Sales Distributor at the Mary Kay offices in Shanghai, China. These corporate rituals of performance recognition are powerful activities that reinforce the inspirational “You Can Do It” spirit of company founder Mary Kay Ash. by the numbers 39 8 percent of executives surveyed said that fostering a shared understanding of values was an important capability. 51 percent of employees polled said they felt there was no clear path toward advancement at their current employer. 43 percent of employees polled said they believed they could only advance if they left their current job. 69 percent of employees polled said their company was taking the right steps to weather the recession. 55 percent of employees polled said that their company would emerge from the recession stronger than it was going into the recession. 78 percent of college freshmen in 2009 said that “to be well-off financially” was very important or essential. 42 percent of college freshmen in 1969 said that “to be well-off financially” was very important or essential. 45 percent of employees surveyed said that their companies’ ability to innovate was below average when it came to moving quickly from generating ideas to selling products. dress, the types of automobiles provided to top executives, and the availability of corporate aircraft are examples of material symbols. Others include the size of offices, the elegance of furnishings, executive “perks” (extra benefits provided to managers such as health club memberships, use of company-owned facilities, and so forth), employee fitness centers or on-site dining facilities, and reserved parking spaces for certain employees. At WorldNow, a business that helps local media companies develop new online distribution channels and revenue streams, an important material symbol is an old dented drill that the founders purchased for $2 at a thrift store. The drill symbolizes the company’s culture of “drilling down to solve problems.” When an employee is presented with the drill in recognition of outstanding work, he or she is expected to personalize the drill in some way and devise a new rule for caring for it. One employee installed a Bart Simpson trigger; another made the drill wireless by adding an antenna. The company’s “icon” carries on the culture even as the organization evolves and changes.36 Material symbols convey to employees who is important and the kinds of behavior (for example, risk taking, conservative, authoritarian, participative, individualistic, and so forth) that are expected and appropriate. LANGUAGE Many organizations and units within organizations use language as a way to identify and unite members of a culture. By learning this language, members attest to their acceptance of the culture and their willingness to help preserve it. For instance, at Cranium, a Seattle board game company, “chiff ” is used to remind employees of the need to be incessantly innovative in everything they do. “Chiff ” stands for “clever, highquality, innovative, friendly, fun.”37 At Build-A-Bear Workshop stores, employees are encouraged to use a sales technique called “Strive for Five,” in which they work to sell each customer five items. The simple rhyming slogan is fast becoming a powerful tool to drive sales.38 Over time, organizations often develop unique terms to describe equipment, key personnel, suppliers, customers, processes, or products related to its business. New employees are frequently overwhelmed with acronyms and jargon that, after a short period of time, become a natural part of their language. Once learned, this language acts as a common denominator that bonds members. How Culture Affects Managers Houston-based Apache Corp. has become one of the best performers in the independent oil drilling business because it has fashioned a culture that values risk taking and quick decision making. Potential hires are judged on how much initiative they’ve shown in getting CHAPTER 2 | UNDERSTANDING MANAGEMENT'S CONTEXT projects done at other companies. And company employees are handsomely rewarded if they meet profit and production goals.40 Because an organization’s culture constrains what they can and cannot do and how they manage, it’s particularly relevant to managers. Such constraints are rarely explicit. They’re not written down. It’s unlikely they’ll even be spoken. But they’re there, and all managers quickly learn what to do and not do in their organization. For instance, you won’t find the following values written down, but each comes from a real organization. Look busy even if you’re not. If you take risks and fail around here, you’ll pay dearly for it. Before you make a decision, run it by your boss so that he or she is never surprised. We make our product only as good as the competition forces us to. What made us successful in the past will make us successful in the future. If you want to get to the top here, you have to be a team player. The link between values such as these and managerial behavior is fairly straightforward. Take, for example, a so-called “ready-aim-fire” culture. In such an organization, managers will study and analyze proposed projects endlessly before committing to them. However, in a “ready-fire-aim” culture, managers take action and then analyze what has been done. Or, say an organization’s culture supports the belief that profits can be increased by cost cutting and that the company’s best interests are served by achieving slow but steady increases in quarterly earnings. Managers are unlikely to pursue programs that are innovative, risky, long term, or expansionary. In an organization whose culture conveys a basic distrust of employees, managers are more likely to use an authoritarian leadership style than a democratic one. Why? The culture establishes for managers appropriate and expected behavior. For example, Banco Santander, whose headquarters are located 20 kilometers from downtown Madrid, has been described as a “risk-control freak.” The company’s managers adhered to “banking’s stodgiest virtues—conservatism and patience.” However, it’s those values that triggered the company’s growth from the sixth largest bank in Spain to the largest bank in the euro zone.41 As shown in Exhibit 2-9, a manager’s decisions are influenced by the culture in which he or she operates. An organization’s culture, especially a strong one, influences and constrains the way managers plan, organize, lead, and control. Planning • The degree of risk that plans should contain • Whether plans should be developed by individuals or teams • The degree of environmental scanning in which management will engage Organizing • How much autonomy should be designed into employees’ jobs • Whether tasks should be done by individuals or in teams • The degree to which department managers interact with each other Leading • The degree to which managers are concerned with increasing employee job satisfaction • What leadership styles are appropriate • Whether all disagreements—even constructive ones—should be eliminated Controlling • Whether to impose external controls or to allow employees to control their own actions • What criteria should be emphasized in employee performance evaluations • What repercussions will occur from exceeding one’s budget EXHIBIT 2-9 Managerial Decisions Affected by Culture 57 58 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT LEARNING OUTCOME Describe current issues in organizational culture. 2.4 Current Issues in Organizational Culture Nordstrom, the specialty retail chain, is renowned for its attention to customers. Nike’s innovations in athletic shoe and apparel technology are legendary. Tom’s of Maine is known for its commitment to doing things ethically and spiritually. How have these organizations achieved such reputations? Their organizational cultures have played a crucial role. Let’s look at three current cultural issues: creating an innovative culture, creating a customerresponsive culture, and nurturing workplace spirituality. Creating an Innovative Culture You may not recognize IDEO’s name, but you’ve probably used a number of its products. As a product design firm, it takes the ideas that corporations bring it and turns those ideas into reality. Some of its creations range from the first commercial mouse (for Apple) to the first standup toothpaste tube (for Procter & Gamble) to the handheld personal organizer (for Palm) to the Contour USB glucose meter (for Bayer AG). It’s critical that IDEO’s culture support creativity and innovation.42 And you might actually own and use products from another well-known innovative organization—Apple.43 From its founding in 1976 to today, Apple has been on the forefront of product design and development. They’ve brought us Mac, iPod, iTunes, iPhone, and the iPad tablet device that is changing the way you read materials such as this textbook. Although both these companies are in industries where innovation is critical to success, the fact is that any successful organization needs a culture that supports innovation. How important is culture to innovation? In a recent survey of senior executives, over half said that the most important driver of innovation for companies was a supportive corporate culture.44 What does an innovative culture look like? According to Swedish researcher Goran Ekvall, it would be characterized by the following: Challenge and involvement – Are employees involved in, motivated by, and committed to long-term goals and success of the organization? Freedom – Can employees independently define their work, exercise discretion, and take initiative in their day-to-day activities? Trust and openness – Are employees supportive and respectful to each other? Idea time – Do individuals have time to elaborate on new ideas before taking action? Playfulness/humor – Is the workplace spontaneous and fun? Conflict resolution – Do individuals make decisions and resolve issues based on the good of the organization versus personal interest? Debates – Are employees allowed to express opinions and put forth ideas for consideration and review? Risk-taking – Do managers tolerate uncertainty and ambiguity, and are employees rewarded for taking risks?45 Creating a Customer-Responsive Culture Harrah’s Entertainment, the world’s largest gaming company, is fanatical about customer service and for good reason. Company research showed that customers who were satisfied with the service they received at a Harrah’s casino increased their gaming expenditures by 10 percent and those who were extremely satisfied increased their gaming expenditures by 24 percent. When customer service translates into these types of results, of course managers would want to create a customer-responsive culture!46 What does a customer-responsive culture look like?47 Exhibit 2-10 describes five characteristics of customer-responsive cultures and offers suggestions as to what managers can do to create that type of culture. Spirituality and Organizational Culture What do Southwest Airlines, Chick-fil-A, Ford, Xerox, Timberland, and HewlettPackard have in common? They’re among a growing number of organizations that have CHAPTER 2 | UNDERSTANDING MANAGEMENT'S CONTEXT Characteristics of Customer-Responsive Culture 59 EXHIBIT 2-10 Suggestions for Managers Type of employee Hire people with personalities and attitudes consistent with customer service: friendly, attentive, enthusiastic, patient, good listening skills Type of job environment Design jobs so employees have as much control as possible to satisfy customers, without rigid rules and procedures Empowerment Give service-contact employees the discretion to make day-to-day decisions on job-related activities Role clarity Reduce uncertainty about what service-contact employees can and cannot do by continual training on product knowledge, listening, and other behavioral skills Consistent desire to satisfy and delight customers Clarify organization’s commitment to doing whatever it takes, even if it’s outside an employee’s normal job requirements Creating a Customer-Responsive Culture embraced workplace spirituality. What is workplace spirituality? It’s a culture in which organizational values promote a sense of purpose through meaningful work taking place in the context of community.48 Organizations with a spiritual culture recognize that people have a mind and a spirit, seek to find meaning and purpose in their work, and desire to connect with other human beings and be part of a community. And such desires aren’t limited to workplaces, as a recent study showed that college students also are searching for meaning and purpose in life.49 Workplace spirituality seems to be important now for a number of reasons. Employees are looking for ways to cope with the stresses and pressures of a turbulent pace of life. Contemporary lifestyles—single-parent families, geographic mobility, temporary jobs, technologies that create distance between people—underscore the lack of community that Since starting Build-A-Bear Workshop in 1997, company founder Maxine Clark has worked to create a supportive corporate culture that would inspire employee creativity and innovation. At company headquarters in Overland, Missouri, the work environment is playful, spontaneous, and fun. It’s a place where dogs are welcome, bringing joy to employees like Katie Cernuto shown in this photo watching Jack, her yellow lab mix, play tug with Smash, another employee’s dog. For a company whose mission is “to bring the Teddy Bear to life,” a relaxed dress code and flexible work schedules add to a culture that employees describe as upbeat, happy, busy, and fun. workplace spirituality A culture where organizational values promote a sense of purpose through meaningful work that takes place in the context of community 60 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT many people feel. As humans, we crave involvement and connection. In addition, as baby boomers navigate mid-life issues, they’re looking for something meaningful, something beyond the job. Others wish to integrate their personal life values with their professional lives. For others, formalized religion hasn’t worked and they continue to look for anchors to replace a lack of faith and to fill a growing sense of emptiness. What type of culture can do all these things? What differentiates spiritual organizations from their nonspiritual counterparts? Research shows that spiritual organizations tend to have five cultural characteristics.50 1. Strong sense of purpose. Spiritual organizations build their cultures around a meaningful purpose. While profits are important, they’re not the primary values of the organization. For instance, Timberland’s slogan is “Boots, Brand, Belief,” which embodies the company’s intent to use its “resources, energy, and profits as a publicly traded footwear-and-apparel company to combat social ills, help the environment, and improve conditions for laborers around the globe . . . and to create a more productive, efficient, loyal, and committed employee base.”51 2. Focus on individual development. Spiritual organizations recognize the worth and value of individuals. They aren’t just providing jobs; they seek to create cultures in which employees can continually grow and learn. 3. Trust and openness. Spiritual organizations are characterized by mutual trust, honesty, and openness. Managers aren’t afraid to admit mistakes. And they tend to be extremely upfront with employees, customers, and suppliers. 4. Employee empowerment. Managers trust employees to make thoughtful and conscientious decisions. For instance, at Southwest Airlines, employees—including flight attendants, baggage handlers, gate agents, and customer service representatives—are encouraged to take whatever action they deem necessary to meet customer needs or help fellow workers, even if it means going against company policies. 5. Toleration of employee expression. The final characteristic that differentiates spiritually based organizations is that they don’t stifle employee emotions. They allow people to be themselves—to express their moods and feelings without guilt or fear of reprimand. Critics of the spirituality movement have focused on two issues: legitimacy (Do organizations have the right to impose spiritual values on their employees?) and economics (Are spirituality and profits compatible?). An emphasis on spirituality clearly has the potential to make some employees uneasy. Critics might argue that secular institutions, especially businesses, have no business imposing spiritual values on employees. This criticism is probably valid when spirituality is defined as bringing religion into the workplace.52 However, it’s less valid when the goal is helping employees find meaning in their work. If concerns about today’s lifestyles and pressures truly characterize a growing number of workers, then maybe it is time for organizations to help employees find meaning and purpose in their work and to use the workplace to create a sense of community. The issue of whether spirituality and profits are compatible is certainly important. Limited evidence suggests that the two may be compatible. One study found that companies that introduced spiritually based techniques improved productivity and significantly reduced turnover.53 Another found that organizations that provided their employees with opportunities for spiritual development outperformed those that didn’t.54 Others reported that spirituality in organizations was positively related to creativity, ethics, employee satisfaction, job involvement, team performance, and organizational commitment.55 CHAPTER 2 | UNDERSTANDING MANAGEMENT'S CONTEXT Let’s Get Real: 61 What Would You Do? My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma, page 44 To ensure the culture continues, it has to be intertwined in every aspect of the business. The managers have to live it, but the employees have to believe it. The hardest challenge for JetBlue will be to steer the culture as the company grows. (I specifically use the word steer because I believe that a company culture is an organic entity, which changes with the company. You cannot control it directly but guide its direction.) • JetBlue needs to continue to reinforce the culture using their five key values. The culture needs to be practiced every day in everything the company does, including the language used in memos and advertising, the hiring and promotion process, and the interaction with customers. • A company culture cannot just come from the top down. Managers need to engage employees in the whole process. JetBlue should create employee teams who support and believe in the culture to help steer the culture as the company grows. Management needs to listen to the employees and hear what they are saying, even if they don’t want to hear it or don’t believe what they hear. Use tools such as anonymous surveys, focus groups, and suggestion “boxes” to engage employees. Hearing the employees will help to gauge the culture of the company. Dana RobbinsMurray Account Director Caliber Group Tucson, AZ PREPARING FOR: Exams/Quizzes CHAPTER SUMMARY by Learning Outcomes LEARNING OUTCOME 2.1 Contrast the actions of managers according to the omnipotent and symbolic views. According to the omnipotent view, managers are directly responsible for an organization’s success or failure. The symbolic view argues that much of an organization’s success or failure is due to external forces outside managers’ control. The two constraints on manager’s discretion are the organization’s culture (internal) and the environment (external). Managers aren’t totally constrained by these two factors since they can and do influence their culture and environment. LEARNING OUTCOME 2.2 Describe the constraints and challenges facing managers in today’s external environment. The external environment includes those factors and forces outside the organization that affect its performance. The main components include economic, demographic, political/legal, sociocultural, technological, and global. Managers face constraints and challenges from these components because of the impact they have on jobs and employment, environmental uncertainty, and stakeholder relationships. LEARNING OUTCOME 2.3 Discuss the characteristics and importance of organizational culture. The seven dimensions of culture are attention to detail, outcome orientation, people orientation, team orientation, aggressiveness, stability, and innovation and risk taking. In organizations with strong cultures, employees are more loyal and performance tends to be higher. The stronger a culture becomes, the more it affects the way managers plan, organize, lead, and control. The original source of a culture reflects the vision of organizational founders. A culture is maintained by employee selection practices, the actions of top managers, and socialization processes. Also, culture is transmitted to employees through stories, rituals, material symbols, and language. These elements help employees “learn” what values and behaviors are important as well as who exemplifies those values. The culture affects how managers plan, organize, lead, and control. LEARNING OUTCOME 2.4 Describe current issues in organizational culture. The characteristics of an innovative culture are challenge and involvement, freedom, trust and openness, idea time, playfulness/humor, conflict resolution, debates, and risk-taking. A customer-responsive culture has five characteristics: outgoing and friendly employees; jobs with few rigid rules, procedures, and regulations; empowerment; clear roles and expectations; and employees who are conscientious in their desire to please the customer. Workplace spirituality is important because employees are looking for a counterbalance to the stresses and pressures of a turbulent pace of life. Aging baby boomers and other workers are looking for something meaningful in their lives, an involvement and connection that they often don’t find in contemporary lifestyles, and to meet the needs that organized religion is not meeting for some of them. Spiritual organizations tend to have five characteristics: strong sense of purpose, focus on individual development, trust and openness, employee empowerment, and toleration of employee expression. 2.1 62 2.4 CHAPTER 2 | UNDERSTANDING MANAGEMENT'S CONTEXT REVIEW AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. Describe the two perspectives on how much impact managers have on an organization’s success or failure. 2. Why is it important for managers to understand the external environmental components? 3. Describe an effective culture for (a) a relatively stable environment and (b) a dynamic environment. Explain your choices. 4. “Businesses are built on relationships.” What do you think this statement means? What are the implications for managing the external environment? 5. Refer to Exhibit 2-6. How would a first-line manager’s job differ in these two organizations? How about a toplevel manager’s job? 6. Classrooms have cultures. Describe your classroom culture using the seven dimensions of organizational culture. Does the culture constrain your instructor? How? Does it constrain you as a student? How? 7. Can culture be a liability to an organization? Explain. 8. Discuss the impact of a strong culture on organizations and managers. 9. Using Exhibit 2-8, explain how a culture is formed and maintained. 10. Explain why workplace spirituality seems to be an important concern. ETHICS DILEMMA opponents.56 We saw it in swim meets at the Beijing summer Olympics and on the ski slopes at the Vancouver winter Olympics. What do you think? Is this an ethical use of technology? What if your school (or country) was competing for a championship and couldn’t afford to outfit athletes in such equipment and it affected your ability to compete? Would that make a difference? What ethical guidelines might you suggest for such situations? In many ways, technology has made all of us more productive. However, ethical issues do arise in how and when technology is used. Take the sports arena. All kinds of technologically advanced sports equipment (swimsuits, golf clubs, ski suits, etc.) have been developed that can sometimes give competitors/players an edge over their SKILLS EXERCISE Developing Your Environmental Scanning Skill About the Skill Anticipating and interpreting changes that are taking place in the environment is an important skill that managers need. Information that comes from scanning the environment can be used in making decisions and taking actions. And managers at all levels of an organization need to know how to scan the environment for important information and trends. Steps in Practicing the Skill You can be more effective at scanning the environment if you use the following suggestions:57 1. Decide which type of environmental information is important to your work. Perhaps you need to know changes in customers’ needs and desires or perhaps you need to know what your competitors are doing. Once you know the type of information that you’d like to have, you can look at the best ways to get that information. 2. Regularly read and monitor pertinent information. There is no scarcity of information to scan, but what you need to do is read those information sources that are pertinent. How do you know information sources are pertinent? They’re pertinent if they provide you with the information that you identified as important. 3. Incorporate the information that you get from your environmental scanning into your decisions and actions. Unless you use the information you’re getting, you’re wasting your time getting it. Also, the more that you find you’re using information from your environmental scanning, the more likely it is that you’ll want to continue to invest time and other resources into gathering it. You’ll see that this information is important to your being able to manage effectively and efficiently. 63 64 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT 4. Regularly review your environmental scanning activities. If you find that you’re spending too much time getting nonuseful information or if you’re not using the pertinent information that you’ve gathered, you need to make some adjustments. 5. Encourage your subordinates to be alert to information that is important. Your employees can be your “eyes and ears” as well. Emphasize to them the importance of gathering and sharing information that may affect your work unit’s performance. Practicing the Skill The following suggestions are activities you can do to practice and reinforce the behaviors associated with scanning the environment. WORKING TOGETHER Team Exercise Although all organizations face environmental constraints, the components in their external environments differ. Get into a small group with three to four other class members and choose one organization from two different industries. 1. Select an organization with which you’re familiar either as an employee or perhaps as a frequent customer. Assume that you’re the top manager in this organization. What types of information from environmental scanning do you think would be important to you? Where would you find this information? Now assume that you’re a first-level manager in this organization. Would the types of information you’d get from environmental scanning change? Explain. 2. Assume you’re a regional manager for a large bookstore chain. Using the Internet, what types of environmental and competitive information were you able to identify? For each source, what information did you find that might help you do your job better? Describe the external components for each organization. How are your descriptions different for the two organizations? How are they similar? Now, using the same two organizations, see if you can identify the important stakeholders for these organizations. As a group, be prepared to share your information with the class and to explain your choices. MY TURN TO BE A MANAGER Find two current examples in any of the popular business periodicals of the omnipotent and symbolic views of management. Write a paper describing what you found and how the two examples you found represent the views of management. Choose an organization with which you’re familiar or one that you would like to know more about. Create a table identifying potential stakeholders of this organization. Then, indicate what particular interests or concerns these stakeholders might have. Pick two organizations that you interact with frequently (as an employee or as a customer) and assess their culture by looking at the following aspects: Physical Design (buildings, furnishings, parking lot, office or store design): Where are they located and why? Where do customers and employees park? What does the office/store layout look like? What activities are encouraged or discouraged by the physical layout? What do these things say about what the organization values? Symbols (logos, dress codes, slogans, philosophy statements): What values are highlighted? Where are logos displayed? Whose needs are emphasized? What concepts are emphasized? What actions are prohibited? Which are encouraged? Are there artifacts that are prominently displayed? What do those artifacts symbolize? What do these things say about what the organization values? Words (stories, language, job titles): What stories are repeated? How are employees addressed? What do job titles say about the organization? Are jokes/anecdotes used in conversation? What do these things say about what the organization values? Policies and Activities (rituals, ceremonies, financial rewards, policies for how customers or employees are treated) [Note: you may be able to assess this one only if you’re an employee or know the organization well.] What activities are rewarded? Ignored? What kinds of people succeed? Fail? What rituals are important? Why? What events get commemorated? Why? What do these things say about what the organization values? If you belong to a student organization, evaluate its culture by answering the following: How would you describe the culture? How do new members learn the CHAPTER 2 | UNDERSTANDING MANAGEMENT'S CONTEXT culture? How is the culture maintained? If you don’t belong to a student organization, talk to another student who does and evaluate it using the same questions. Steve’s and Mary’s suggested readings: G. Barna, Master Leaders (Barna Books), 2009; Terrence E. Deal and Allan A. Kennedy, Corporate Culture: The Rites and Rituals of Corporate Life (Perseus Books Group, 2000); Edgar H. Schein, The Corporate Culture Survival Guide (Jossey-Bass, 1999); and Kim S. Cameron and Robert E. Quinn, Diagnosing and Changing Organizational Culture (Jossey-Bass, 2005). Find one example of a company that represents each of the current issues in organizational culture. Describe what the company is doing that reflects its commitment to this culture. In your own words, write down three things you learned in this chapter about being a good manager. Self-knowledge can be a powerful learning tool. Go to mymanagementlab.com and complete any of these self-assessment exercises: What’s the Right Organizational Culture for Me? How Well Do I Respond to Turbulent Change? Am I Experiencing Work/Family Conflict? Using the results of your assessments, identify personal strengths and weaknesses. What will you do to reinforce your strengths and improve your weaknesses? CASE APPLICATION Out of Control ith a worldwide recall of some 8 million cars and W 51 deaths that U.S. regulators say have been caused by mechanical failures in its cars, Toyota Motor Corporation faces a corporate crisis of epic proportions.58 What happened at the car company that had finally achieved the title of world’s largest car maker? (It overtook General Motors in 2008.) What factors contributed to the mess it now found itself in? At the core of Toyota’s manufacturing prowess is the Toyota Production System (TPS), which has long been touted and revered as a model of corporate efficiency and quality. Four management principles (the 4P model) were at the core of TPS and guided employees: problem solving, people and partners, process, and philosophy. The idea behind these principles was that “Good Thinking Means Good Product.” Taiichi Ohno, a long-time Toyota executive, is widely credited as the innovative genius behind TPS. During the 1950s, Ohno, along with a small core of other Toyota executives, developed several principles of car-making efficiency that became what is now known as lean manufacturing and just-in-time inventory management. “Ohno’s ideas not only changed the auto industry, they changed late-twentieth-century Toyota Motor Company President Akio Toyoda, grandson of the company’s founder, bows in apology during a press conference where he announced a global vehicle recall. Toyoda’s gesture of bowing is the Japanese way of publicly expressing remorse as an act of contrition to restore faith in the company’s brands. manufacturing.” At the very core of these concepts were attention to detail and a “noble frugality.” However, over the years, it appears that Toyota’s executives slowly lost the “purity” of that approach as the once-strong commitment to quality embedded in Toyota’s corporate culture became lost in its aggressive moves to grow market share and achieve productivity gains. From about 1995 to 2009, Toyota embarked on the “most aggressive overseas expansions in automotive history” and at the same time had a laser-like unparalleled focus on cutting costs. Four major cost-cutting and expansion initiatives severely strained organizational processes and employees. One initiative was localized 65 66 PART ONE | INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT manufacturing. Starting in the late 1990s, Toyota established manufacturing hubs in Asia, North America, and Europe. Such an approach meant relying more on local suppliers and design teams to tailor cars to local tastes. Another initiative was called Construction of Cost Competitiveness for the 21st Century, or CCC21. It was a massive cost reduction program. Through an ongoing process of redesigning parts and working with suppliers, more than $10 billion of savings were achieved. The Value Innovation initiative was a more ambitious version of CCC21. Under this program, more savings were achieved by making the entire development process cheaper and by further cutting parts and production costs. And finally, the Global 15 initiative was a master global plan for attaining a 15 percent share of the global car market by 2010. As of mid-2010, Toyota had an 11.7 percent share of the worldwide car market. However, this “combination of high-speed global growth and ambitious cost cuts led to the quality lapses that tarnished the once-mighty brand.” Toyota’s president, Akio Toyoda apologized for the company’s actions and said, “We pursued growth over the speed at which we were able to develop our people and our organization. I regret that this has resulted in the safety issues described in the recalls we face today, and I am deeply sorry for any accidents that Toyota drivers have experienced.” So what is Toyota doing to remedy its problems? In addition to the massive recall, the company’s president says that it is setting up a system to respond more quickly to complaints. In fact, the automaker has promised to give regional executives a bigger role in issuing recalls based on local consumer complaints, although Mr. Toyoda says that the final decisions regarding recalls will continue to be made in Japan. The company is also holding twice-yearly global quality meetings and more frequent regional quality meetings. And finally, the company is re-committing itself to better training employees in quality control. Discussion Questions 1. Using Exhibit 2-5 and the information from the case, describe the culture at Toyota Motor Corporation. Why do you think this type of culture might be important to a car maker? 2. How do you think a long-standing culture that had such a strong commitment to quality lost its ability to influence employee behaviors and actions? What lesson can be learned about organizational culture from this? 3. Do you think it was important for Mr. Toyoda to apologize for the company’s decisions? Why? (Think in terms of the company’s stakeholders.) 4. What could other organizations learn from Toyota’s experiences about the importance of organizational culture? CASE APPLICATION Dressing Up ven when times are good, the department store industry is one of the toughest industries to compete in. E Like many of its competitors, Kohl’s Corporation struggles to find a way to continue its successes even when faced with a drastically changed external environment.59 Based in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin, Kohl’s has more than 1,050 discount department stores in 49 states. The company has aggressively moved into the western and southern United States, although nearly a quarter of its stores are located in the Midwest. In 2010, the company had revenues of over $17.1 billion and profits of $991 million. One analyst has described Kohl’s as “the best-positioned department store in this economy and one of the leading retailers with respect to inventory management, technological innovation, and merchandising and marketing execution.” However, to continue its successes, it’s important that Kohl’s understand its external environment. The retail shopping environment has changed. Customers became disenchanted with the shopping experience at many retail establishments. Long checkout lines, missing or vague product information, out-of-stock products, incorrect price tags, and scarce and often unknowledgeable sales staff made the shopping CHAPTER 2 | UNDERSTANDING MANAGEMENT'S CONTEXT experience quite unpleasant. Local shopping malls and their anchor department stores lost much of their popularity with shoppers. Coupled with the economic and demographic shifts taking place, department stores faced big challenges. Kohl’s has done business differently than most department stores. Its approach is built around convenience and price. Its typical store is a box-like structure with one floor of merchandise under inexpensive lighting where shoppers use carts as they browse through the simple racks and shelves of clothing, shoes, and home apparel merchandise. The company is especially selective about its locations. Everything about the way Kohl’s does business—who it sells to and how those customers shop—hinges on where it puts its stores. Its goal is to set up shop in the heart of “soccer mom country.” It tries to avoid malls when looking at store sites, believing that its target customers—young mothers—typically don’t have the time for a long drive to a mall location and certainly don’t want the parking hassles when they do go shopping. Kohl’s approach has been free-standing buildings with smaller parking lots in retailing power centers (a retailing destination where several large, specialty brand retailers often locate together) and other kinds of strip malls. For instance, the Kohl’s store in Springfield, Missouri, is located adjacent to a Walmart Super Center, a Home Depot, a McDonald’s, a Michael’s hobby and crafts store, and other casual dining restaurants. The company’s target market is women ages 25 to 54 who have children and whose annual household income is moderate ranging from $35,000 to $75,000. Even the merchandise selection offered at Kohl’s is aimed at this target demographic by selling casual brands (such as Sag Harbor, Villager, Union Bay, Haggar, Jockey, HealthTex, and others) at low prices. To continue attracting this segment, Kohl’s added a home furnishings collection called Casa Cristina (named for Cristina Saralegui, the host of a Spanish-language television show on Univision) and its own Food Network brand of dinnerware and cooking tools. In addition, the company has brought on board popular designers—including Vera Wang and Lauren Conrad—with lines of clothing, shoes, and home goods. Kohl’s believed that their customers wanted to and were willing to purchase more fashionable merchandise selections. As one retail expert put it, “The chains have decided to design apparel on their own, ensuring that their lower-income customers can buy skinny jeans and satchel bags at the same time as shoppers at higher-end stores.” Although Kohl’s has done well so far in a difficult industry, it faces some serious challenges. In addition to the uncertain external environment, competitors ranging from JCPenney and Sears to Macy’s have copied its approach. Even specialty retailers such as Old Navy (a unit of Gap, Inc.) and American Eagle have shifted from trendy teenage fashion toward clothing that appeals to moms. And on the discount end, Walmart Stores has added national brands and improved the quality of its apparel. Discussion Questions 1. According to the case, what external trends did managers at Kohl’s have to deal with? In addition to these, what other external components might be important to these managers? (See Exhibit 2-2.) How might they keep track of changes in these components? 2. If you were a manager at Kohl’s headquarters, what types of external information might you want? What if you were a manager of a local Kohl’s store? What types of external information might you want? 3. Look at Exhibit 2-3. In what cell of the environmental uncertainty matrix would you place Kohl’s? Why? How might Kohl’s managers “manage” the environmental uncertainty? 4. What stakeholders do you think might be important to a company like Kohl’s? What issues/concerns might be important to those stakeholders? Explain your choices. 67 3 chapter Let’s Get Real: Meet the Manager Cheryl Trewatha Sr. Group Manager Quality Assurance Target Corp. Brooklyn Park, MN MY JOB: You’ll be hearing more from this real manager throughout the chapter. My team validates that Target branded product shipped from anywhere in the world meets U.S. federal, state, and Target quality, safety, and performance standards. BEST PART OF MY JOB: Because my team is responsible for handling the diverse group of products from the more than a dozen countries that we manufacture in, we are always facing new, unique, and ever-changing problems to solve. Managing in a Global Environment 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Contrast ethnocentric, polycentric, and geocentric attitudes toward global business. page 71 Discuss the importance of regional trading alliances and global trade mechanisms. page 72 Describe the structures and techniques organizations use as they go international. page 77 Explain the relevance of the political/legal, economic, and cultural environments to global business. page 80 LEARNING OUTCOMES WORST PART OF MY JOB: Trying to interpret laws and regulations set by state and federal governing bodies around product manufacturing and compliance and apply them to a worldwide manufacturing base. BEST MANAGEMENT ADVICE EVER RECEIVED: Your team is your most valuable resource; be sure to maximize its potential. 69 A Manager’s Dilemma Crunchy Paneer standards of living and an enthusiasm to embrace (cheese) and Potato Burritos.1 These Taco—Potato. Western brands.” However,Yum’s push into India puts names may sound strange unless it into a battle with the other major fast-food compa- you’re a customer at a Taco Bell nies for the wallets and appetites of consumers in restaurant in India. Yum Brands Inc. one of the world’s most populous countries. (the parent company of Taco Bell, Although 60 percent of Yum’s profits now come Pizza Hut, and KFC) opened its first from overseas markets, Graham Allen and Niren Taco Bell in Bangalore in early 2010. Chaudhary, the managing director of Yum’s India With an increasingly affluent con- business, recognize the challenges that face them sumer base, India is an attractive in establishing a strong presence in India. One such market for fast-food chains. Graham challenge is understanding the cultural differences Allen, president of Yum’s international in managing employees. How will corporate division, said, “What we’re seeing in processes and procedures need to change to ac- India is similar to what we saw in commodate its newly hired Indian employees? China a decade ago. You have a young population with improving What Would You Do? Despite their vast experience in global markets, managers at Yum Brands still face challenges as they enter new markets. Even large successful organizations with talented managers (such as Yum Brands) don’t always do it right. Despite these challenges, going global is something that most organizations want to do. A study of U.S. manufacturing firms found that companies that operated in multiple countries had twice the sales growth and significantly higher profitability than strictly domestic firms.2 However, if managers don’t closely monitor changes in their global environment or don’t consider specific location characteristics as they plan, organize, lead, and control, they may find limited global success. In this chapter, we’re going to discuss the issues managers face as they manage in a global environment. Who Owns What? One way to see how global the marketplace has become is to consider the country of ownership origin for some familiar products. You might be surprised to find that many products you thought were made by U.S. companies aren’t! Take the following quiz3 and then check your answers at the end of the chapter on page 95. 1. Tombstone and DiGiorno frozen pizzas are products of a company based in: a. Italy b. United States c. Canada d. Switzerland 2. Lebedyansky juices are owned by a company based in: a. Japan b. United Kingdom c. United States d. Russia 3. Rajah spices are products of a company based in: a. United States b. Brazil c. India d. Switzerland 4. Tetley Tea is owned by a company located in: a. Great Britain b. India c. Japan d. Spain 5. Volvo cars are products of a company based in: a. United States b. United Kingdom c. Japan d. China 6. Dos Equis, Tecate, and Sol beer products are owned by a company based in: a. The Netherlands b. Mexico c. United States d. Colombia 7. The company that produces Boboli pizza crust is based in: a. United States b. Mexico c. Italy d. Spain 70 CHAPTER 3 | MANAGING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT 71 8. The parent company of Braun electric shavers is located in: a. Switzerland b. Germany c. United States d. Japan 9. The company that owns Sephora Cosmetics retail stores is located in: a. Germany b. Canada c. France d. United States 10. The digital ad firm Barbarian Group is owned by a company based in: a. United Kingdom b. United States c. Greece d. South Korea 11. Lean Cuisine frozen meals are products of a company based in: a. Germany b. United States c. Switzerland d. Brazil 12. The British newspaper, the Independent, is owned by a company based in: a. Russia b. United Kingdom c. South Africa d. Canada 13. The company that makes French’s mustard is based in: a. China b. United Kingdom c. Japan d. United States 14. Eight O’Clock Coffee is owned by a company located in: a. India b. Costa Rica c. United States d. Canada 15. Frédérick Fekkai & Co. hair care products are marketed by a company based in: a. Switzerland b. United States c. France d. Italy How well did you do? Were you aware of how many products we use every day that are made by companies not based in the United States? Probably not! Most of us don’t fully appreciate the truly global nature of today’s marketplace. What’s Your Global Perspective? It’s not unusual for Germans, Italians, or Indonesians to speak three or four languages. “More than half of all primary school children in China now learn English and the number of English speakers in India and China—500 million—now exceeds the total number of mother-tongue English speakers elsewhere in the world.” On the other hand, most U.S. children study only English in school—only 24,000 are studying Chinese. And only 22 percent of the population in the United States speaks a language other than English.4 Americans tend to think of English as the only international business language and don’t see a need to study other languages. This could lead to future problems as a major research report commissioned by the British Council says that the “competitiveness of both Britain and the United States is being undermined” by only speaking English.5 Monolingualism is one sign that a nation suffers from parochialism—viewing the world solely through one’s own eyes and perspectives.6 People with a parochial attitude do not recognize that others have different ways of living and working. They ignore others’ values and customs and rigidly apply an attitude of “ours is better than theirs” to foreign cultures. This type of narrow, restricted attitude is one approach that managers might take, but isn’t the only one.7 In fact, there are three possible global attitudes. Let’s look at each more closely. First, an ethnocentric attitude is the parochialistic belief that the best work approaches and practices are those of the home country (the country in which the company’s headquarters are located). Managers with an ethnocentric attitude believe that people in foreign countries don’t have the needed skills, expertise, knowledge, or experience to make the best business decisions as people in the home country do. They don’t trust foreign employees with key decisions or technology. parochialism ethnocentric attitude Viewing the world solely through your own perspectives, leading to an inability to recognize differences between people The parochialistic belief that the best work approaches and practices are those of the home country 3.1 LEARNING OUTCOME Contrast ethnocentric, polycentric, and geocentric attitudes toward global business. 72 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES She was recently named, for the fourth year straight, the Most Powerful Woman in Business by Fortune magazine and was named one of the 100 most powerful women in the world by Forbes magazine.9 “She” is Indra Nooyi, CEO of PepsiCo. Born in India, Ms. Nooyi joined PepsiCo as head of corporate strategy in 1994 and moved quickly up the ladder to become chief executive officer. In 2007, she also assumed the role of chairman of PepsiCo’s board of directors. As the CEO of a large American company, Nooyi recognizes how important her company’s global business operations are. On a recent trip to China, a critical market for PepsiCo, Nooyi didn’t take the usual “CEO tour” of conference rooms, but spent 10 days immersing herself in China. She says, “I wanted to look at how people live, how they eat, what the growth possibilities are.” Here’s a leader who knows what it will take to succeed in today’s global environment. 3.2 LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss the importance of regional trading alliances and global trade mechanisms. Next, a polycentric attitude is the view that employees in the host country (the foreign country in which the organization is doing business) know the best work approaches and practices for running their business. Managers with this attitude view every foreign operation as different and hard to understand. Thus, they’re likely to let employees there figure out how best to do things. The final type of global attitude managers might have is a geocentric attitude, a world-oriented view that focuses on using the best approaches and people from around the globe. Managers with this type of attitude have a global view and look for the best approaches and people regardless of origin. For instance, Carlos Ghosn, CEO of Nissan and Renault, was born in Brazil to Lebanese parents, educated in France, and speaks four languages fluently. He could very well be the “model of the modern major corporate leader in a globalized world bestraddled by multinational companies.”8 Ghosn’s background and perspective have given him a much broader understanding of what it takes to manage in a global environment, something that is characteristic of the geocentric attitude. A geocentric attitude requires eliminating parochial attitudes and developing an understanding of cross-cultural differences. That’s the type of approach successful managers will need in today’s global environment. Understanding the Global Environment One important feature of today’s global environment is global trade which, if you remember history class, isn’t new. Countries and organizations have been trading with each other for centuries.10 And it continues strong today, as we saw in the chapter-opening quiz. Global trade today is shaped by two forces: regional trading alliances and trade mechanisms that ensure that global trade can happen. Regional Trading Alliances Global competition once was considered country against country—the United States versus Japan, France versus Germany, Mexico versus Canada, and so on. Now, global competition is shaped by regional trading agreements including the European Union (EU), North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), and others. THE EUROPEAN UNION. The European Union (EU) is an economic and political partnership of 27 democratic European countries. (See Exhibit 3-1.) Three countries (Croatia, Macedonia, and Turkey) have applied for membership and analysts predict that Croatia will be the next to gain membership in 2012 or 2013.11 When the 12 original members formed the EU in 1992, the primary motivation was to reassert the region’s economic position against the United States and Japan. Before then, each European nation had border controls, taxes, and subsidies; nationalistic policies; and protected industries. These barriers to travel, employment, investment, and trade prevented European companies from developing economic efficiencies. Now with these barriers removed, the economic power represented by the EU is considerable. Its current membership covers a population base of nearly half a billion people and accounts for approximately 31 percent of the world’s total economic output.12 CHAPTER 3 | MANAGING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT EXHIBIT 3-1 European Union Map Finland Norway Sweden Iceland Se Denmark B N o r t h A t l a n t i c O c e a n R u s s i a Latvia ic United Kingdom lt Ireland a Estonia North Sea Lithuania a Russia Belarus Netherlands English Channel Poland Belgium European Union Countries Germany Bay of Biscay France Moldova Austria Switzerland Hungary Slovenia Portugal Ukraine Czech Rep. Slovakia Luxembourg Applied for Membership Croatia BosniaHerzegovina Serbia Andorra Italy Spain Ad ria tic Romania Black Sea Montenegro Bulgaria Se a Macedonia Albania M e d i t 0 250 e r Tyrrhenian Sea r a n e 500 Miles a n S 0 250 500 Kilometers Turkey Ionian Greece Aegean Sea Sea Malta e a Cyprus Another step toward full unification occurred when the common European currency, the euro, was adopted. The euro is currently in use in 16 of the 27 member states and all new member countries must adopt the euro. Only Denmark, the United Kingdom, and Sweden have been allowed to opt out of using the euro.13 Another push in unification has been attempts to develop a unified European constitution. EU leaders struggled for nearly a decade to enact a treaty designed to strengthen the EU and give it a full-time president. The socalled Lisbon Treaty (or Reform Treaty) has one remaining hurdle—a signature from the president of the Czech Republic.14 This treaty would provide EU with a common legal framework and the tools to meet the challenges of a changing world including climatic and demographic changes, globalization, security, and energy. And backers feel the new structure would help strengthen the EU’s common foreign policy. Many believe that a more unified Europe could have more power and say in the global arena. As the former Italian prime minister and European Commission president said, “Europe has lost and lost and lost weight in the world.”15 The last couple of years were difficult economically for the EU and its members, like it was for many global regions. “The traditional concept of ‘solidarity’ is being undermined by protectionist pressures in some member countries and the rigors of maintaining a common currency for a region that has diverse economic needs.”16 Some analysts believe that the EU is at a pivotal point. “They can spur growth across the region by following through on long-overdue pledges to trim benefits and free up labor markets. Or they can polycentric attitude European Union (EU) The view that the managers in the host country know the best work approaches and practices for running their business A union of 27 European nations created as a unified economic and trade entity geocentric attitude A single common European currency A world-oriented view that focuses on using the best approaches and people from around the globe euro 73 74 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES Since NAFTA went into effect in 1994, trade between Mexico and Canada has grown fivefold. Canadianbased aircraft maker Bombardier is boosting Mexico’s aerospace industry by adding the country to its global manufacturing network. At a new plant built by Bombardier in Queretaro, Mexico, employees produce electrical harnesses (shown in this photo), fuselages, and flight controls for all Bombardier aircraft in production. The company also plans to build a new facility in Queretaro to make the composite structure for its new Learjet 85 business jet. The plants in Mexico help Bombardier reduce production costs and put the company closer to the growing demand for its aircraft in the Latin American markets. face a decade of economic stagnation.”17 Another major issue faced by the 16 euro zone members—the massive debt crisis in Greece. But leaders bridged sharp philosophical divides and joined forces with the International Monetary Fund to forge an agreement to bail out Greece as its debt troubles intensified.18 The euro zone is the world’s largest unified economy after the United States and a major source of world demand for goods and services. Therefore, the importance of this regional trading alliance will continue to evolve as EU members work together to assert the region’s economic power with successful European businesses continuing to play a crucial role in the global economy. NORTH AMERICAN FREE TRADE AGREEMENT (NAFTA) AND OTHER LATIN AMERICAN AGREEMENTS. When agreements in key issues covered by the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) were reached by the Mexican, Canadian, and U.S. governments in 1992, a vast economic bloc was created. As of 2010, it remains the largest trade bloc in the world in terms of combined GDP of its members.19 Between 1994, when NAFTA went into effect, and 2007 (the most recent year for complete statistics), merchandise trade between the United States and Canada and Mexico increased from 4.4 percent to 6.6 percent.20 Eliminating the barriers to free trade (tariffs, import licensing requirements, customs user fees) strengthened the economic power of all three countries, but not equally. Mexico, especially, has struggled to prosper from free trade. Although Mexico’s exports increased dramatically under NAFTA (quintupling to $292 billion during 2008), large numbers of people still migrate to the United States in search of jobs and prosperity. The dream of a richer and more prosperous Mexico has not been realized.21 And the recent worldwide recession has not helped the situation either. However, despite the criticisms and the challenges, the North American trading bloc remains a powerful force in today’s global economy. Other Latin American nations have become part of free trade blocs, as well. Colombia, Mexico, and Venezuela led the way when all three signed an economic pact in 1994 eliminating import duties and tariffs. Another agreement, the U.S.–Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), promotes trade liberalization between the United States and five Central American countries: Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua. However, only El Salvador and Costa Rica have joined. The other countries have yet to change laws to be in line with the agreement.22 The United States also signed a trade deal with Colombia that is said to be the “largest Washington has concluded with a Latin American country since signing” NAFTA.23 Also, negotiators from 34 countries in the Western Hemisphere continue work on a Free Trade Area of the CHAPTER 3 | MANAGING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT 75 Americas (FTAA) agreement, which was to have been operational no later than 2005, a missed targeted deadline. Leaders of these nations have yet to reach any agreement, leaving the future of the FTAA up in the air.24 However, another free trade bloc of 10 South American countries known as the Southern Common Market or Mercosur already exists. Some South Americans see Mercosur as an effective way to combine resources to better compete against other global economic powers, especially the EU and NAFTA. With the future of FTAA highly doubtful, this regional alliance could take on new importance. ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHEAST ASIAN NATIONS (ASEAN). The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is a trading alliance of 10 Southeast Asian nations. (See Exhibit 3-2.) The ASEAN region has a population over 591 million with a combined GDP of US$1.5 trillion.25 In addition to these 10 nations, leaders from a group dubbed ASEAN+3, which include China, Japan, and South Korea, have met to discuss trade issues. Also, leaders from India, Australia, and New Zealand have participated in trade talks with ASEAN+3 as well. The main issue with creating a trade bloc of all 16 nations has been the lack of any push toward regional integration. Despite the Asian culture’s emphasis on consensus building, “ASEAN’s biggest problem is that individual members haven’t been willing to sacrifice for the common good.”26 Although Southeast Asian leaders agree that closer regional integration would help economic growth, the large differences in wealth among ASEAN members have made it “difficult to create common standards because national standards remain so far apart.”27 However, the challenges brought on by the recent worldwide recession, which adversely affected many countries in this region, triggered greater interest in pushing for integration. In fact, on January 1, 2010, China and ASEAN launched an ambitious free trade agreement, making it the world’s third largest trade bloc.28 In addition to these free trade alliances, it’s hoped that by 2015, an established ASEAN economic community will allow goods, skilled workers, and capital to move freely among member countries. EXHIBIT 3-2 Current members Myanmar ASEAN Map Source: Based on J. McClenahen and T. Clark, “ASEAN at Work,” IW, May 19, 1997, p. 42. Laos Thailand Vietnam Philippines Cambodia Brunei Malaysia Singapore Indonesia North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) An agreement among the Mexican, Canadian, and U.S. governments in which barriers to trade have been eliminated A trading alliance of 10 Southeast Asian nations 76 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES Despite the barriers and challenges, progress toward regional integration continues. This fast-growing region means ASEAN and other Asian trade alliances will be increasingly important globally with an impact that eventually could rival that of both NAFTA and the EU. OTHER TRADE ALLIANCES. It’s important to know about global business because all businesses are impacted by the global market place. If you don’t directly import the products or services you sell you are mostly likely competing against an imported product. Other regions around the world have developed regional trading alliances as well. For instance, the 53-nation African Union (AU), which came into existence in 2002, has the vision of “building an integrated, prosperous and peaceful Africa.”29 Members of this alliance have created an economic development plan to achieve greater unity among Africa’s nations. Like members of other trade alliances, these countries hope to gain economic, social, cultural, and trade benefits from their association. Such cooperation couldn’t be more important as Africa’s economic output is booming like never before. GDP growth rates have been averaging 4.8 percent, the highest rate outside Asia, with most of that growth coming domestically. In addition, Africa has been experiencing a “virtually unprecedented period of political stability with governments steadily deregulating industries and developing infrastructure.”30 Five east African nations—Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda—have formed a common market called the East African Community (EAC).31 Under this agreement, goods can be sold across borders without tariffs. The next step for the EAC will be monetary union, although that will take time to implement. Finally, the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) composed of eight member states (India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, the Maldives, and Afghanistan) began eliminating tariffs in 2006.32 Its aim, like all the other regional trading alliances, is to allow free flow of goods and services. The preceding discussion indicates that global trade is alive and well. Regional trade alliances continue to be developed in areas where member countries believe it’s in their best interest economically and globally to band together and strengthen their economic position. Global Trade Mechanisms Global trade among nations doesn’t just happen on its own. As trade issues arise, global trade systems ensure that trade continues efficiently and effectively. Indeed, one of the realities of globalization is the interdependence of countries—that is, what happens in one can impact others, good or bad. For example, the financial crisis that started in the United States in 2008 threw the global economy into a tailspin. Although things spiraled precariously out of control, it didn’t completely collapse. Why? Because governmental interventions and trade and financial mechanisms helped avert a potential crisis. We’re going to look at four important global trade mechanisms: the World Trade Organization, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank Group, and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION. The World Trade Organization (WTO) is a global organization of 153 countries that deals with the rules of trade among nations.33 Formed in 1995, the WTO evolved from the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), a trade agreement in effect since the end of World War II. Today, the WTO is the only global organization that deals with trade rules among nations. Its membership consists of 153 member countries and 30 observer governments (which have a specific time frame within which they must apply to become members). The goal of the WTO is to help countries conduct trade through a system of rules. Although critics have staged vocal protests against the WTO claiming that global trade destroys jobs and the natural environment, it appears to play an important role in monitoring, promoting, and protecting global trade. For instance, the WTO recently ruled that the European plane maker Airbus received improper European Union subsidies for the A380 super jumbo jet and several other airplanes, hurting its American rival, Boeing.34 Airbus has the right to appeal the ruling, but even after appealing, any member ultimately found to have provided improper subsidies is obliged to bring its policies into compliance with global trade rules. Failure to comply could bring trade CHAPTER 3 | MANAGING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT sanctions. In another recent news story, the U.S. government is weighing whether to file a WTO complaint against China’s Internet censorship.35 In addition, the WTO played a pivotal role in keeping global trade active during the global economic crisis. WTO DirectorGeneral Pascal Lamy said, “During these difficult times, the multilateral trading system has once again proven its value. WTO rules and principles have assisted governments in keeping markets open and they now provide a platform from which trade can grow as the global economy improves.”36 These examples illustrate the types of trade issues with which the WTO deals. Such issues are best handled by an organization such as the WTO and it has played, without a doubt, an important role in promoting and protecting global trade. INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND AND WORLD BANK GROUP. Two other important and necessary global trade mechanisms include the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank Group. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is an organization of 185 countries that promotes international monetary cooperation and provides member countries with policy advice, temporary loans, and technical assistance to establish and maintain financial stability and to strengthen economies.37 The World Bank Group is a group of five closely associated institutions, all owned by its member countries, that provides vital financial and technical assistance to developing countries around the world. The goal of the World Bank Group is to promote long-term economic development and poverty reduction by providing members with technical and financial support.38 For instance, during the recent global recession, financial commitments by the World Bank Group reached $100 billion as it helped nations respond to and recover from the economic downturn.39 Both entities have an important role in supporting and promoting global business. ORGANIZATION FOR ECONOMIC COOPERATION AND DEVELOPMENT (OECD). The forerunner of the OECD, the Organization for European Economic Cooperation, was formed in 1947 to administer American and Canadian aid under the Marshall Plan for the reconstruction of Europe after World War II. Today, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) is a Paris-based international economic organization whose mission is to help its 30 member countries achieve sustainable economic growth and employment and raise the standard of living in member countries while maintaining financial stability in order to contribute to the development of the world economy.40 When needed, the OECD gets involved in negotiations with OECD countries so they can agree on “rules of the game” for international cooperation. One current focus is combating small-scale bribery in overseas commerce. The OECD says such “so-called facilitation payments are corrosive . . . particularly on sustainable economic development and the rule of law.”41 With a long history of facilitating economic growth around the globe, the OECD now shares its expertise and accumulated experiences with more than 70 developing and emerging market economies. Doing Business Globally World Trade Organization (WTO) World Bank Group A global organization of 153 countries that deals with the rules of trade among nations A group of five closely associated institutions that provides financial and technical assistance to developing countries International Monetary Fund (IMF) An organization of 185 countries that promotes international monetary cooperation and provides advice, loans, and technical assistance by the numbers 42 93 percent of public middle and high schools in the United States offer Spanish; only 4 percent offer Chinese. 32 percent of college graduates surveyed saw themselves using a language other than their first language at work. 70 percent of Americans aged 18 to 24 have not traveled outside the United States in the last three years. 20 54 percent of U.S. homes house residents who speak a foreign language. 22 16 percent of U.S. workers say they “live to work” rather than “work to live”. 3.3 Daimler, Nissan Motor, and Renault are part of a strategic partnership that is sharing smallcar technology and power trains—an arrangement that all three automakers say will allow them to better compete in an environment where cutting costs is crucial. Until he moved to Japan, Arturo Vega, a Spanish-language teacher, had no idea that the Sofyl brand of yogurt he always bought in his native Mexico was actually made by a Japanese company called Yakult Honsha. Reckitt Benckiser, the U.K.-based maker of consumer products (Lysol, Woolite, and French’s mustard are just a few of its products), has operations in more than 77 percent of business travelers said they’re more successful in their career because of global business travel experience. percent of French workers say they “live to work”. LEARNING OUTCOME Describe the structures and techniques organizations use as they go international. Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) An international economic organization that helps its 30 member countries achieve sustainable economic growth and employment 78 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES 60 countries and its top 400 managers represent 53 different nationalities. The Missouri State Employees’ Retirement System pays retirement benefits to recipients in 20 countries outside the United States.43 As these examples show, organizations in different industries and from different countries do business globally. But how do they do so? Different Types of International Organizations This baby in Ryazan, Russia, enjoys Nestlé’s baby food that may not be available in other parts of the world. That’s because Nestlé believes that “food is a local matter.” As a multidomestic corporation, Nestlé spans the globe in marketing more than 10,000 products in 130 countries. The company adapts its products to local cultures, tastes, traditions, and consumer needs. Wherever possible, Nestlé produces its products locally and uses local raw materials and components. Even though some Nestlé brands are global, others are marketed in specific geographic areas, such as the Middle East, and many are local to a country or to an area within a country. Companies doing business globally aren’t new. DuPont started doing business in China in 1863. H.J. Heinz Company was manufacturing food products in the United Kingdom in 1905. Ford Motor Company set up its first overseas sales branch in France in 1908. By the 1920s, other companies, including Fiat, Unilever, and Royal Dutch/Shell had gone international. But it wasn’t until the mid-1960s that international companies became quite common. Today, few companies don’t do business internationally. However, there’s not a generally accepted approach to describe the different types of international companies; different authors call them different things. We use the terms multinational, multidomestic, global, and transnational.44 A multinational corporation (MNC) is any type of international company that maintains operations in multiple countries. One type of MNC is a multidomestic corporation, which decentralizes management and other decisions to the local country. This type of globalization reflects the polycentric attitude. A multidomestic corporation doesn’t attempt to replicate its domestic successes by managing foreign operations from its home country. Instead, local employees typically are hired to manage the business and marketing strategies are tailored to that country’s unique characteristics. For example, Switzerland-based Nestlé is a multidomestic corporation. With operations in almost every country on the globe, its managers match the company’s products to its consumers. In parts of Europe, Nestlé sells products that are not available in the United States or Latin America. Another example is Frito-Lay, a division of PepsiCo, which markets a Dorito chip in the British market that differs in both taste and texture from the U.S. and Canadian version. Even the king of retailing, Walmart Stores, has learned that it must “think locally to act globally” as it tailors its inventories and store formats to local tastes.45 Many consumer product companies organize their global businesses using this approach because they must adapt their products to meet the needs of local markets. Another type of MNC is a global company, which centralizes its management and other decisions in the home country. This approach to globalization reflects the ethnocentric attitude. Global companies treat the world market as an integrated whole and focus on the need for global efficiency and cost savings. Although these companies may have considerable global holdings, management decisions with company-wide implications are made from headquarters in the home country. Some examples of global companies include Sony, Deutsche Bank AG, Starwood Hotels, and Merrill Lynch. Other companies use an arrangement that eliminates artificial geographical barriers. This type of MNC is often called a transnational, or borderless, organization and reflects a geocentric attitude.46 For example, IBM dropped its organizational structure based on country and reorganized into industry groups. Ford Motor Company is pursuing what it calls the One Ford concept as it integrates its operations around the world. Another company, Thomson SA, which is legally based in France, has eight major locations around the globe. The CEO said, “We don’t want people to think we’re based anyplace.”47 Managers choose this approach to increase efficiency and effectiveness in a competitive global marketplace.48 How Organizations Go International When organizations do go international, they often use different approaches. (See Exhibit 3-3.) Managers who want to get into a global market with minimal investment may start with global sourcing (also called global outsourcing), which is purchasing materials or labor from around the world wherever it is cheapest. The goal: take advantage of lower costs CHAPTER 3 | MANAGING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT 79 EXHIBIT 3-3 Minimal Global Investment • Global Sourcing How Organizations Go Global Significant Global Investment • Exporting and Importing • Licensing • Franchising • Strategic Alliance – Joint Venture • Foreign Subsidiary in order to be more competitive. For instance, Massachusetts General Hospital uses radiologists in India to interpret CT scans.49 Although global sourcing may be the first step to going international for many companies, they often continue to use this approach because of the competitive advantages it offers. Each successive stage of going international beyond global sourcing, however, requires more investment and thus entails more risk for the organization. The next step in going international may involve exporting the organization’s products to other countries—that is, making products domestically and selling them abroad. In addition, an organization might do importing, which involves acquiring products made abroad and selling them domestically. Both usually entail minimal investment and risk, which is why many small businesses often use these approaches to doing business globally. Managers also might use licensing or franchising, which are similar approaches involving one organization giving another organization the right to use its brand name, technology, or product specifications in return for a lump sum payment or a fee usually based on sales. The only difference is that licensing is primarily used by manufacturing organizations that make or sell another company’s products and franchising is primarily used by service organizations that want to use another company’s name and operating methods. For example, Chicago consumers can enjoy Guatemalan Pollo Campero fried chicken, South Koreans can indulge in Dunkin’ Brands’ coffee, Hong Kong residents can dine on Shakey’s Pizza, and Malaysians can consume Schlotzky’s deli sandwiches—all because of franchises in these countries. On the other hand, Anheuser-Busch InBev has licensed the right to brew and market its Budweiser beer to brewers such as Kirin in Japan and Crown Beers in India. When an organization has been doing business internationally for a while and has gained experience in international markets, managers may decide to make more of a direct foreign investment. One way to increase investment is through a strategic alliance, which is a partnership between an organization and a foreign company partner or partners in which both share resources and knowledge in developing new products or building production facilities. For example, Honda Motor and General Electric teamed up to produce a new jet multinational corporation (MNC) global sourcing franchising A broad term that refers to any and all types of international companies that maintain operations in multiple countries Purchasing materials or labor from around the world wherever it is cheapest An organization gives another organization the right to use its name and operating methods multidomestic corporation Making products domestically and selling them abroad An MNC that decentralizes management and other decisions to the local country global company An MNC that centralizes management and other decisions in the home country transnational or borderless organization An MNC in which artificial geographical barriers are eliminated exporting importing Acquiring products made abroad and selling them domestically licensing An organization gives another organization the right to make or sell its products using its technology or product specifications strategic alliance A partnership between an organization and a foreign company partner(s) in which both share resources and knowledge in developing new products or building production facilities 80 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES engine. A specific type of strategic alliance in which the partners form a separate, independent organization for some business purpose is called a joint venture. For example, Hewlett-Packard has had numerous joint ventures with various suppliers around the globe to develop different components for its computer equipment. These partnerships provide a relatively easy way for companies to compete globally. Finally, managers may choose to directly invest in a foreign country by setting up a foreign subsidiary as a separate and independent facility or office. This subsidiary can be managed as a multidomestic organization (local control) or as a global organization (centralized control). As you can probably guess, this arrangement involves the greatest commitment of resources and poses the greatest amount of risk. For instance, United Plastics Group of Westmont, Illinois, built two injection-molding facilities in Suzhou, China. The company’s executive vice president for business development said that level of investment was necessary because “it fulfilled our mission of being a global supplier to our global accounts.”50 3.4 LEARNING OUTCOME Explain the relevance of the political/legal, economic, and cultural environments to global business. Managing in a Global Environment Assume for a moment that you’re a manager going to work for a branch of a global organization in a foreign country. You know that your environment will differ from the one at home, but how? What should you look for? Any manager who finds himself or herself in a new country faces challenges. In this section, we’ll look at some of these challenges. Although our discussion is presented through the eyes of a U.S. manager, this framework could be used by any manager regardless of national origin who manages in a foreign environment. The Political/Legal Environment My advice for someone who has little global experience is research all aspects of that country’s culture and find a liaison native to the culture to take as a partner to gain the needed perspective. U.S. managers are accustomed to a stable legal and political system. Changes tend to be slow, and legal and political procedures are well established. Elections are held at regular intervals, and even when the political party in power changes after an election, it’s unlikely that anything too radical will happen. The stability of laws allows for accurate predictions. However, this certainly isn’t true for all countries. Managers must stay informed of the specific laws in countries where they do business. For instance, the president of Zimbabwe is pushing ahead with plans to force foreign companies to sell majority stakes to locals.51 Such a law would be a major barrier to foreign business investment. In China, foreign businesses are finding a lessthan-welcoming climate as government policies are making it more difficult to do business there.52 And Swedish retailer Ikea has halted further investment in Russia because of continual governmental red tape delays. Per Kaufmann, Ikea’s Russia country manager, said the decision was “due to the unpredictability of the administrative processes in some regions.”53 Also, some countries have risky political climates. Chicago-based Aon Corporation does an annual political risk assessment, and its 2010 report found that businesses faced the highest level of risk in Afghanistan, Congo DRC, Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Somalia, Sudan, Venezuela, Yemen, and Zimbabwe. Company analysts said that political and financial instability remained a feature of the business landscape as a result of the global recession. They also said that “2010 will see elevated political risk levels continue before an overall tendency for improving global business conditions becomes established.”54 Managers of businesses in countries with higher risk levels face dramatically greater uncertainty. In addition, political interference is a fact of life in some regions, especially in some Asian countries such as China.55 Keep in mind that a country’s political/legal environment doesn’t have to be risky or unstable to be a concern to managers. Just the fact that it differs from that of the home country (United States or other) is important. Managers must recognize these differences if they hope to understand the constraints and opportunities that exist. The Economic Environment Strange as it may sound, 17,000 tons of Parmesan cheese, with an estimated value of $187 million, are being held in the vaults of the Italian bank Credito Emiliano. The cheese is collateral from Italian cheese makers struggling through the recession.56 Such an example CHAPTER 3 | MANAGING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT of an economic factor of business may seem peculiar for those of us in the United States, but it’s not all that unusual for Italian businesses. A global manager must be aware of economic issues when doing business in other countries. First, it’s important to understand a country’s type of economic system. The two major types are a free market economy and a planned economy. A free market economy is one in which resources are primarily owned and controlled by the private sector. A planned economy is one in which economic decisions are planned by a central government. Actually, no economy is purely free market or planned. For instance, the United States and United Kingdom are toward the free market end of the spectrum but do have governmental intervention and controls. The economies of Vietnam and North Korea are more planned. China is also a more planned economy, but until recently had been moving toward being more free market. Why would managers need to know about a country’s economic system? Because it, too, has the potential to constrain decisions. Other economic issues managers need to understand include currency exchange rates, inflation rates, and diverse tax policies. An MNC’s profits can vary dramatically depending on the strength of its home currency and the currencies of the countries in which it operates. For instance, prior to the overall global economic slowdown, the rising value of the euro against both the dollar and the yen had contributed to strong profits for German companies.57 Any currency exchange revaluations can affect managers’ decisions and the level of a company’s profits. Inflation means that prices for products and services are increasing. But it also affects interest rates, exchange rates, the cost of living, and the general confidence in a country’s political and economic system. Country inflation rates can, and do, vary widely. The World Factbook shows rates ranging from a negative 3.9 percent in Qatar to a positive 34 percent in the Seychelles.58 Managers need to monitor inflation trends so they can anticipate possible changes in a country’s monetary policies and make good business decisions regarding purchasing and pricing. Finally, tax policies can be a major economic worry. Some countries’ tax laws are more restrictive than those in an MNC’s home country. Others are more lenient. About the only certainty is that they differ from country to country. Managers need accurate information on tax rules in countries in which they operate to minimize their business’s overall tax obligation. The Cultural Environment Managing today’s talented global workforce can be a challenge!59 A large multinational oil company found that employee productivity in one of its Mexican plants was off 20 percent and sent a U.S. manager to find out why. After talking to several employees, the manager discovered that the company used to have a monthly fiesta in the parking lot for all the employees and their families. Another U.S. manager had canceled the fiestas saying they were a waste of time and money. The message employees were getting was that the company didn’t care about their families anymore. When the fiestas were reinstated, productivity and employee morale soared. At Hewlett-Packard, a cross-global team of U.S. and French engineers were assigned to work together on a software project. The U.S. engineers sent long, detailed e-mails to their counterparts in France. The French engineers viewed the lengthy e-mails as patronizing and replied with quick, concise e-mails. This made the U.S. engineers think that the French were hiding something from them. The situation spiraled out of control and negatively affected output until team members went through cultural training.60 joint venture free market economy A specific type of strategic alliance in which the partners agree to form a separate, independent organization for some business purpose An economic system in which resources are primarily owned and controlled by the private sector foreign subsidiary planned economy Directly investing in a foreign country by setting up a separate and independent production facility or office An economic system in which economic decisions are planned by a central government 81 82 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES As we know from Chapter 2, organizations have different cultures. Countries have cultures too. National culture includes the values and attitudes shared by individuals from a specific country that shape their behavior and their beliefs about what is important.61 Which is more important to a manager—national culture or organizational culture? For example, is an IBM facility in Germany more likely to reflect German culture or IBM’s corporate culture? Research indicates that national culture has a greater effect on employees than does their organization’s culture.62 German employees at an IBM facility in Munich will be influenced more by German culture than by IBM’s culture. Legal, political, and economic differences among countries are fairly obvious. The Japanese manager who works in the United States or his or her American counterpart who works in Japan can get information about laws or tax policies without too much effort. Getting information about cultural differences isn’t quite that easy! The primary reason? It’s difficult for natives to explain their country’s unique cultural characteristics to someone else. For instance, if you were born and raised in the United States, how would you describe U.S. culture? In other words, what are Americans like? Think about it for a moment and see which characteristics in Exhibit 3-4 you identified. HOFSTEDE’S FRAMEWORK FOR ASSESSING CULTURES. Geert Hofstede developed one of the most widely referenced approaches to helping managers better understand differences between national cultures. His research found that countries vary on five dimensions of national culture. These dimensions are described in Exhibit 3-5, which also shows some of the countries characterized by those dimensions. THE GLOBE FRAMEWORK FOR ASSESSING CULTURES. The Global Leadership and Organizational Behavior Effectiveness (GLOBE) research program extended Hofstede’s work by investigating cross-cultural leadership behaviors and gives managers additional information to help them identify and manage cultural differences. Using data from more than 18,000 managers in 62 countries, the GLOBE research team (led by Robert House) identified nine dimensions on which national cultures EXHIBIT 3-4 What Are Americans Like? • Americans are very informal. They tend to treat people alike even when great differences in age or social standing are evident. • Americans are direct. They don’t talk around things. To some foreigners, this may appear as abrupt or even rude behavior. • Americans are competitive. Some foreigners may find Americans assertive or overbearing. • Americans are achievers. They like to keep score, whether at work or at play. They emphasize accomplishments. • Americans are independent and individualistic. They place a high value on freedom and believe that individuals can shape and control their own destiny. • Americans are questioners. They ask a lot of questions, even of someone they have just met. Many may seem pointless (“How ya’ doin’?”) or personal (“What kind of work do you do?”). • Americans dislike silence. They would rather talk about the weather than deal with silence in a conversation. • Americans value punctuality. They keep appointment calendars and live according to schedules and clocks. • Americans value cleanliness. They often seem obsessed with bathing, eliminating body odors, and wearing clean clothes. Sources: Based on M. Ernest (ed.), Predeparture Orientation Handbook: For Foreign Students and Scholars Planning to Study in the United States (Washington, DC: U.S. Information Agency, Bureau of Cultural Affairs, 1984), pp. 103–105; A. Bennett, “American Culture Is Often a Puzzle for Foreign Managers in the U.S.,” Wall Street Journal, February 12, 1986, p. 29; “Don’t Think Our Way’s the Only Way,” The Pryor Report, February 1988, p. 9; and B. J. Wattenberg, ”The Attitudes Behind American Exceptionalism,” U.S. News & World Report, August 7, 1989, p. 25. CHAPTER 3 | MANAGING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT EXHIBIT 3-5 1. Individualistic—People look after their own and family interests Collectivistic—People expect the group to look after and protect them Individualistic Collectivistic United States, Canada, Australia Japan Mexico, Thailand 2. High power distance—Accepts wide differences in power; great deal of respect for those in authority Low power distance—Plays down inequalities: employees are not afraid to approach nor are in awe of the boss High power Low power distance distance Mexico, Singapore, France Italy, Japan United States, Sweden 3. High uncertainty avoidance—Threatened with ambiguity and experience high levels of anxiety Low uncertainty avoidance—Comfortable with risks; tolerant of different behavior and opinions High uncertainty Low uncertainty avoidance avoidance Italy, Mexico, France United Kingdom Canada, United States, Singapore 4. Achievement—Values such as assertiveness, acquiring money and goods, and competition prevail Nurturing—Values such as relationships and concern for others prevail Achievement Nurturing United States, Japan, Mexico Canada, Greece France, Sweden 5. Long-term orientation—People look to the future and value thrift and persistence Short-term orientation—People value tradition and the past Short-term Long-term orientation orientation Germany, Australia, United States, Canada China, Taiwan, Japan differ.63 Two dimensions (power distance and uncertainty avoidance) fit directly with Hofstede’s. Four are similar to Hofstede’s (assertiveness, which is similar to achievement-nurturing; humane orientation, which is similar to the nurturing dimension; future orientation, which is similar to long-term and short-term orientation; and institutional collectivism, which is similar to individualism-collectivism). The remaining three (gender differentiation, in-group collectivism, and performance orientation) offer additional insights into a country’s culture. Here are descriptions of these nine dimensions: Power distance: the degree to which members of a society expect power to be unequally shared. Uncertainty avoidance: a society’s reliance on social norms and procedures to alleviate the unpredictability of future events. Assertiveness: the extent to which a society encourages people to be tough, confrontational, assertive, and competitive rather than modest and tender. Humane orientation: the degree to which a society encourages and rewards individuals for being fair, altruistic, generous, caring, and kind to others. Future orientation: the extent to which a society encourages and rewards future-oriented behaviors such as planning, investing in the future, and delaying gratification. national culture The values and attitudes shared by individuals from a specific country that shape their behavior and beliefs about what is important Global Leadership and Organizational Behavior Effectiveness (GLOBE) program The research program that studies cross-cultural leadership behaviors Hofstede’s Five Dimensions of National Culture 83 84 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES Institutional collectivism: the degree to which individuals are encouraged by societal institutions to be integrated into groups within organizations and society. Gender differentiation: the extent to which a society maximizes gender role differences as measured by how much status and decision-making responsibilities women have. In-group collectivism: the extent to which members of a society take pride in membership in small groups, such as their family and circle of close friends, and the organizations in which they’re employed. Performance orientation: the degree to which a society encourages and rewards group members for performance improvement and excellence. Exhibit 3-6 provides information on how different countries rank on these nine dimensions. Global Management in Today’s World Doing business globally today isn’t easy! As we look at managing in today’s global environment, we want to focus on two important aspects. The first aspect involves the challenges associated with globalization, especially in relation to the openness that’s part of being global. The second aspect revolves around the challenges of managing a global workforce. THE CHALLENGE OF OPENNESS. The push to go global has been widespread. Advocates praise the economic and social benefits that come from globalization, but globalization also creates challenges because of the openness that’s necessary for it to EXHIBIT 3-6 GLOBE Highlights Countries Rating Low Countries Rating Moderate Countries Rating High Assertiveness Sweden New Zealand Switzerland Egypt Ireland Philippines Spain United States Greece Future orientation Russia Argentina Poland Slovenia Egypt Ireland Denmark Canada Netherlands Gender differentiation Sweden Denmark Slovenia Italy Brazil Argentina South Korea Egypt Morocco Uncertainty avoidance Russia Hungary Bolivia Israel United States Mexico Austria Denmark Germany Power distance Denmark Netherlands South Africa England France Brazil Russia Spain Thailand Individualism/collectivism* Denmark Singapore Japan Hong Kong United States Egypt Greece Hungary Germany In-group collectivism Denmark Sweden New Zealand Japan Israel Qatar Egypt China Morocco Performance orientation Russia Argentina Greece Sweden Israel Spain United States Taiwan New Zealand Humane orientation Germany Spain France Hong Kong Sweden Taiwan Indonesia Egypt Malaysia Dimension *A low score is synonymous with collectivism. Source: M. Javidan and R. J. House, “Cultural Acumen for the Global Manager: Lessons from Project GLOBE,” Organizational Dynamics, Spring 2001, pp. 289–305. Copyright © 2001. Reprinted with permission from Elsevier. CHAPTER 3 | MANAGING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT work. One challenge is the increased threat of terrorism by a truly global terror network. Globalization is meant to open up trade and to break down the geographical barriers separating countries. Yet, opening up means just that—being open to the bad as well as the good. From the Philippines and the United Kingdom to Israel and Pakistan, organizations and employees face the risk of terrorist attacks. Another challenge from openness is the economic interdependence of trading countries. As we saw over the last couple of years, the faltering of one country’s economy can have a domino effect on other countries with which it does business. So far, however, the world economy has proved to be quite resilient. And as we discussed earlier, structures that are currently in place, such as the World Trade Organization and the International Monetary Fund, help to isolate and address potential problems. The far more serious challenge for managers in the openness required by globalization comes from intense underlying and fundamental cultural differences—differences that encompass traditions, history, religious beliefs, and deep-seated values. Managing in such an environment can be extremely complicated. Even though globalization has long been praised for its economic benefits, some individuals think that globalization is simply a euphemism for “Americanization”—that is, the way U.S. cultural values and U.S. business philosophy are said to be slowly taking over the world.64 At its best, proponents of Americanization hope others will see how progressive, efficient, industrious, and free U.S. society and businesses are and want to emulate that way of doing things. However, critics claim that this attitude of the “almighty American dollar wanting to spread the American way to every single country,” has created many problems.65 Although history is filled with clashes between civilizations, what’s unique now is the speed and ease with which misunderstandings and disagreements can erupt and escalate. The Internet, television and other media, and global air travel have brought the good and the bad of American entertainment, products, and behaviors to every corner of the globe. For those who don’t like what Americans do, say, or believe, this exposure can lead to resentment, dislike, distrust, and even outright hatred. CHALLENGES OF MANAGING A GLOBAL WORKFORCE. “As more Americans go to mainland China to take jobs, more Chinese and Americans are working side by side. These cross-cultural partnerships, while beneficial in many ways, are also highlighting tensions that expose differences in work experience, pay levels, and communication.”66 Global companies with multicultural work teams are faced with the challenge of managing the cultural differences in work-family relationships. The work-family practices and programs that are appropriate and effective for employees in one country may not be the best solution for employees in other locations.67 These examples indicate challenges that are associated with managing a global workforce. As globalization continues to be important for businesses, it’s obvious that managers need to understand how to best manage that global workforce. Some researchers have suggested that managers need cultural intelligence or cultural awareness and sensitivity skills.68 Cultural intelligence encompasses three main dimensions: (1) knowledge of culture as a concept—how cultures vary and how they affect behavior; (2) mindfulness— the ability to pay attention to signals and reactions in different cross-cultural situations; and (3) behavioral skills—using one’s knowledge and mindfulness to choose appropriate behaviors in those situations. Other researchers have said that what effective global leaders need is a global mind-set, attributes that allow a leader to be effective in cross-cultural environments.69 Those attributes have three components as shown in Exhibit 3-7. cultural intelligence global mind-set Cultural awareness and sensitivity skills Attributes that allow a leader to be effective in cross-cultural environments 85 86 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES EXHIBIT 3-7 A Global Mind-Set Intellectual capital: Knowledge of international business and the capacity to understand how business works on a global scale Psychological capital: Openness to new ideas and experiences Social capital: Ability to form connections and build trusting relationships with people who are different from you Source: Based on M. Javidan, M. Teagarden, and D. Bowen, “Making It Overseas,” Harvard Business Review, April 2010, pp. 109–113; and J. McGregor (ed.), “Testing Managers’ Global IQ,” Bloomberg BusinessWeek, September 28, 2009, p. 68. Leaders who possess such cross-cultural skills and abilities—whether cultural intelligence or a global mind-set—will be important assets to global organizations. Successfully managing in today’s global environment will require incredible sensitivity and understanding. Managers from any country will need to be aware of how their decisions and actions will be viewed, not only by those who may agree, but more importantly, by those who may disagree. They will need to adjust their leadership styles and management approaches to accommodate these diverse views, and at the same time be as efficient and effective as possible in reaching the organization’s goals. CHAPTER 3 | MANAGING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT Let’s Get Real: 87 What Would You Do? My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma, page 70 All aspects of a country’s culture should be researched to understand the dynamics of the culture and their traditions. Some aspects that should be thoroughly understood are: • Understand the length of a normal workday and local laws surrounding overtime pay and maximum allowable hours in a workweek. • What transit challenges employees may face and what flexibility may be provided to accommodate mass transit schedules or work shifts that may be set off-cycle from peak traffic times. • What accommodations employees may prefer such as small kitchens, locker rooms, or prayer space. • What a competitive benefits package may look like, including health benefits and access to doctors for employees and their families. These points are important in attracting a qualified workforce, but an understanding of how to reward and motivate employees in a different culture is imperative for retention of your trained workforce. Understand what types of recognition would be of value and who it should come from. Is recognition between a boss and employee privately or in front of a peer group most valued? What types of awards are most valued: plaques, paid time off or awards of monetary value? How do you make the most of the innovation of your employees? How does the culture affect the chain of command? What is the appropriate way to surface new ideas that may challenge a current process? Provide the appropriate vehicle dictated by the culture to ensure all ideas can be brought forth. Your employees will possess the ideas needed to move your business forward and to implement the changes needed to retain your staff. Be sure not to miss the opportunity to maximize this most valued resource!! Cheryl Trewatha Sr. Group Manager Quality Assurance Target Corp. Brooklyn Park, MN PREPARING FOR: Exams/Quizzes CHAPTER SUMMARY by Learning Outcomes LEARNING OUTCOME 3.1 Contrast ethnocentric, polycentric, and geocentric attitudes toward global business. Parochialism is viewing the world solely through your own eyes and perspectives and not recognizing that others have different ways of living and working. An ethnocentric attitude is the parochialistic belief that the best work approaches and practices are those of the home country. A polycentric attitude is the view that the managers in the host country know the best work approaches and practices for running their business. And a geocentric attitude is a world-oriented view that focuses on using the best approaches and people from around the globe. LEARNING OUTCOME 3.2 Discuss the importance of regional trading alliances and global trade mechanisms. The European Union consists of 27 democratic countries with three countries having applied for membership. Sixteen countries have adopted the euro and all new member countries must adopt it. NAFTA continues to help Canada, Mexico, and the United States strengthen their global economic power. The U.S.–CAFTA alliance is still trying to get off the ground as is the proposed FTAA. Because of the delays for CAFTA and FTAA, Mercosur (Southern Common Market) will likely take on new importance. ASEAN is a trading alliance of ten Southeast Asian nations, a region that remains important in the global economy. The African Union and SAARC are relatively new but will continue to see benefits from their alliances. To counteract some of the risks in global trade, the World Trade Organization (WTO) plays an important role in monitoring and promoting trade relationships. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank Group are two entities that provide monetary support and advice to their member countries. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development assists its member countries with financial support in achieving sustainable economic growth and employment. LEARNING OUTCOME 3.3 Describe the structures and techniques organizations use as they go international. A multinational corporation is an international company that maintains operations in multiple countries. A multidomestic organization is an MNC that decentralizes management and other decisions to the local country (the polycentric attitude). A global organization is an MNC that centralizes management and other decisions in the home country (the ethnocentric attitude). A transnational organization (the geocentric attitude) is an MNC that has eliminated artificial geographical barriers and uses the best work practices and approaches from wherever. Global sourcing is purchasing materials or labor from around the world wherever it is cheapest. Exporting is making products domestically and selling them abroad. Importing is acquiring products made abroad and selling them domestically. Licensing is used by manufacturing organizations that make or sell another company’s products and gives that organization the right to use the company’s brand name, technology, or product specifications. Franchising is similar but is usually used by service organizations that want to use another company’s name and operating methods. A global strategic alliance is a partnership between an organization and foreign company partners in which they share resources and knowledge to develop new products or build facilities. A joint venture is a specific type of strategic alliance in which the partners agree to form a separate, independent organization for some business purpose. A foreign subsidiary is a direct investment in a foreign country that a company creates by establishing a separate and independent facility or office. 88 CHAPTER 3 | MANAGING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT Explain the relevance of the political/legal, economic, and cultural environments to global business. LEARNING OUTCOME 3.4 The laws and political stability of a country are issues in the global political/legal environment with which managers must be familiar. Likewise, managers must be aware of a country’s economic issues such as currency exchange rates, inflation rates, and tax policies. Geert Hofstede identified five dimensions for assessing a country’s culture including individualism-collectivism, power distance, uncertainty avoidance, achievement-nurturing, and long-term/short-term orientation. The GLOBE studies identified nine dimensions for assessing country cultures: power distance, uncertainty avoidance, assertiveness, humane orientation, future orientation, institutional collectivism, gender differentiation, in-group collectivism, and performance orientation. The main challenges of doing business globally in today’s world include (1) the openness associated with globalization and the significant cultural differences between countries; and (2) managing a global workforce, which requires cultural intelligence and a global mind-set. 3.1 3.4 REVIEW AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. Contrast ethnocentric, polycentric, and geocentric attitudes toward global business. 2. Describe the current status of each of the various regional trading alliances. 3. Contrast multinational, multidomestic, global, and transnational organizations. 4. What are the managerial implications of a borderless organization? 5. Describe the different ways organizations can go international. 6. Explain how the global political/legal and economic environments affect managers of global organizations. 7. Can the GLOBE framework presented in this chapter be used to guide managers in a Thai hospital or a government agency in Venezuela? Explain. 8. What challenges might confront a Mexican manager transferred to the United States to manage a manufacturing plant in Tucson, Arizona? Will these issues be the same for a U.S. manager transferred to Guadalajara? Explain. 9. How might the cultural differences in the GLOBE dimensions affect how managers (a) use work groups, (b) develop goals/plans, (c) reward outstanding employee performance, and (d) deal with employee conflict? 10. Is globalization good for business? For consumers? Discuss. ETHICS DILEMMA company would have to be ready at any time to move where the company wanted them to go. Now, however, that “joke” may not be so funny. A new employee relocation strategy has been raising some eyebrows, especially when thousands of U.S. employees have been laid off. The plan gives the company’s U.S. employees the opportunity to move their jobs to emerging market The “joke” has always been that IBM—the world’s top provider of computer products and services—stood for “I’ve Been Moved” instead of an abbreviation for its corporate name, International Business Machines.70 That’s because employees on their way up in the 89 90 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES countries, and in turn, the company would foot some of the relocation costs. IBM’s U.S. employment fell 5 percent, while emerging market employment rose 15 percent, particularly in high growth markets such as India, China, Brazil, and Russia. What do you think? Why might the company have developed this new program? Does this seem “right” to you? What ethical issues does this strategy raise? SKILLS EXERCISE 4. Accept diversity. Not everything in a collaborative effort will “go your way.” Be willing to accept different ideas and different ways of doing things. Be open to these ideas and the creativity that surrounds them. 5. Seek additional information. Ask individuals to provide additional information. Encourage others to talk and more fully explain suggestions. This brainstorming opportunity can assist in finding creative solutions. 6. Don’t become defensive. Collaboration requires open communications. Discussions may focus on things you and others may not be doing or need to do better. Don’t take the constructive feedback as personal criticism. Focus on the topic being discussed, not on the person delivering the message. Recognize that you cannot always be right! Developing Your Collaboration Skill About the Skill Collaboration is the teamwork, synergy, and cooperation used by individuals when they seek a common goal. In many cross-cultural settings, the ability to collaborate is crucial. When all partners must work together to achieve goals, collaboration is critically important to the process. Steps in Practicing the Skill 1. Look for common points of interest. The best way to start working together in a collaborative fashion is to seek commonalities that exist among the parties. Common points of interest enable communications to be more effective. 2. Listen to others. Collaboration is a team effort. Everyone has valid points to offer, and each individual should have an opportunity to express his or her ideas. 3. Check for understanding. Make sure you understand what the other person is saying. Use feedback when necessary. WORKING TOGETHER Team Exercise Moving to a foreign country isn’t easy, no matter how many times you’ve done it or how receptive you are to new experiences. Successful global organizations are able to identify the best candidates for global assignments, and one of the ways they do this is through individual assessments prior to assigning people to global facilities. Form groups of three to five individuals. Your newly formed team, the Global Assignment Task Force, has been given the responsibility for Practicing the Skill Interview managers from three different organizations about how they collaborate with others. What specific tips have they discovered for effectively collaborating with others? What problems have they encountered when collaborating? How have they dealt with these problems? developing a global aptitude assessment form for Yum Brands (the company described in the chapter-opening Manager’s Dilemma). Because Yum is expanding its global operations significantly, it wants to make sure that it’s sending the best possible people to the various global locations. Your team’s assignment is to come up with a rough draft of a form to assess people’s global aptitude. Think about the characteristics, skills, attitudes, etc. that you think a successful global employee would need. Your team’s draft should be at least one-half page but not longer than one page. Be prepared to present your ideas to your classmates and professor. MY TURN TO BE A MANAGER Find two current examples of each of the ways that organizations go international. Write a short paper describing what these companies are doing. The U.K.-based company, Kwintessential, has several cultural knowledge “quizzes” on its Web site [http://www.kwintessential.co.uk/resources/ culture-tests.html]. Go to the Web site and try two or three of them. Were you surprised at your score? What does your score tell you about your cultural awareness? On this Web site, you’ll also find Country Etiquette Guides. Pick two countries to study (from different regions) and compare them. How are they the same? Different? How would this information help a manager? CHAPTER 3 | MANAGING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT Interview two or three professors or students at your school who are from other countries. Ask them to describe what the business world is like in their country. Write a short paper describing what you found out. Take advantage of opportunities that you might have to travel to other countries, either on personal trips or on school-sponsored trips. Create a timeline illustrating the history of the European Union and a timeline illustrating the history of NAFTA. Suppose that you were being sent on an overseas assignment to another country (you decide which one). Research that country’s economic, political/legal, and cultural environments. Write a report summarizing your findings. If you don’t have your passport yet, go through the process to get one. (The current fee in the United States is $135.) Steve’s and Mary’s suggested readings: H. L. Sirkin, J. W. Hermerling, and A. K. Bhattacharya, Globality: Competing with Everyone from Everywhere for Everything (Boston Consulting Group, Inc., 2008); J. Zogby, The Way We’ll Be (Random House, 2008); Nancy J. Adler, International Dimensions of Organizational Behavior, 5th ed. (South-Western Publishing, 2008); Kenichi Ohmae, The Next Global Stage (Wharton School Publishing, 2005); John Hooker, Working Across Cultures (Stanford Business Books, 2003); and Thomas L. Friedman, The Lexus and the Olive Tree (Anchor Books, 2000). If you want to better prepare yourself for working in an international setting, take additional classes in international management and international business. You’ve been put in charge of designing a program to prepare your company’s managers to go on an overseas assignment. What should (and would) this program include? Be specific. Be thorough. Be creative. In your own words, write down three things you learned in this chapter about being a good manager. Self-knowledge can be a powerful learning tool. Go to mymanagementlab.com and complete these self-assessment exercises: Am I Well-Suited for a Career as a Global Manager? and What Are My Attitudes Toward Workplace Diversity? Using the results of your assessments, identify personal strengths and weaknesses. What will you do to reinforce your strengths and improve your weaknesses? CASE APPLICATION Held Hostage ostage and manager.71 These are two words that you would H not usually expect to hear spoken in the same breath. However, during the first few months of 2009, workers at manu- facturing facilities of 3M Company, Sony Corporation, and Caterpillar Inc. in France took managers hostage. Why? To negotiate better severance packages and benefits for laid-off employees. French workers have long been known for their aggressive and radical responses to what they feel is wrong or oppressive treatment. Says one French executive, “Protest is inscribed in the genes of French culture. In the past, peasants protested against their lords. Today the difference is that the lords are chief executives.” Protesting French workers have been known to burn piles of tires in city streets or tie up traffic with caravans of farm tractors. In one instance, striking truckers blockaded roads and highways to highlight their campaign for Nicholas Polutnik, director of Caterpillar’s plant near Grenoble, France, sits at his desk while held captive as a hostage by striking employees who protested planned layoffs until management agreed to negotiate with the union over compensation of laidoff workers. zretirement at age 55. The labor blockade worked, as the French government relented when food supplies started to run out. And the tactic of taking the boss hostage has been used previously, as well. For instance, in 91 92 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES 1997, workers at the state-run mortgage bank Credit Foncier de France took their boss hostage for five days to try and prevent the bank’s closing even though it had been losing money. Although kidnapping your boss isn’t legal, a French sociologist who surveyed 3,000 companies found that 18 of them had experienced an “executive detention” in the prior three years. These actions by workers, which have been peaceful and more of a symbolic protest, were in response to the economic downturn. Although France wasn’t in any worse shape than other big industrialized economies, the country’s “strong tradition of egalitarianism triggers strong reactions when people think they are being mistreated or when better-off people appear to flaunt their wealth at a time of general hardship.” At Caterpillar’s French facility near Grenoble, unhappy workers first went on strike for a day. The next day, they detained the plant director and four other managers for about 24 hours. The managers were released only after the company agreed to resume talks with unions and a government mediator on “how to improve compensation for workers being laid off.” The incident at Caterpillar followed others at Sony and 3M, where managers also were held captive by workers angry over being laid off. Although all of the hostage-taking incidents were resolved peacefully, some analysts wonder if more violent actions may be in store, especially if workers feel they have nothing to lose. Discussion Questions 1. What’s your reaction to these events? Do you think your reaction is influenced by the culture, values, and traditions of the country in which you find yourself? Explain. 2. Look at what Hofstede’s and the GLOBE findings say about France. How would you explain these workers’ actions given these findings? 3. We’ve said that it’s important for managers to be aware of external environmental forces, especially in global settings. Discuss this statement in light of the events described. 4. What might the French managers have done differently leading up to the point at which workers felt they needed to take their managers hostage in order to be heard? Explain. 5. Do you think something like this could happen in the United States? Why or why not? CHAPTER 3 | MANAGING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT CASE APPLICATION Global Stumble t’s not always easy to do business globally, as executives at Japanese brokerage firm Nomura I Holdings Inc. are discovering.72 Nomura acquired Lehman’s international operations in late 2008 after Lehman’s parent company sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, an action that added about 8,000 non-Japanese workers. For Nomura, the time seemed right to strengthen its global expansion strategy. However, since the acquisition, cultural and business differences between the two organizations have been a major stumbling block. Although blending two diverse cultures requires intentional efforts when different organizations merge or are acquired, it’s particularly challenging when the key assets in the cross-border acquisition are the people employed by the organization being acquired. Workplace tensions arose over executive compensation, how quickly decisions were made, and how women were treated. For instance, during Nomura’s initial training session for new hires, the men and women were separated. The women—many of whom had earned prestigious degrees from the likes of Harvard—were taught how to wear their hair, serve tea, and choose their clothing according to the season. The company’s dress code was strictly interpreted for women, also. Women from Lehman were told to remove highlights from their hair, to wear sleeves no shorter than mid-bicep, and to avoid brightly colored clothing. Several women were sent home from the trading floor for dressing “inappropriately.” One said, “I was sent home for wearing a short-sleeve dress, even though I was wearing a jacket.” A Nomura spokesperson said, “The dress code is displayed on the company’s intranet and is intended to ensure that clients and colleagues don’t feel uncomfortable.” Lehman bankers also said they found the process for getting approval on deals was “slower and more difficult than it was at Lehman.” Also, at Lehman, clients were categorized, in large part, by the fees they paid. At Nomura, more emphasis was placed on other factors, such as the length of the relationship. The bankers at Nomura said that “their new colleagues were too willing to dump loyal clients for a quick profit.” In its defense, Nomura has tried to blend the two cultures. In offices in Europe and in Asia outside of Japan, there’s a mix of nationalities. Also, the company has promoted a handful of non-Japanese employees to high-ranking positions. “To reduce the Tokyo-centric nature of the company, Hiromi Yamaji, head of global investment banking, moved to London, and Naoki Matsuba, global head of equities, moved to New York.” Until March 2010, Nomura’s executive committee was all Japanese men. However, in an attempt to make the company more globally oriented, an ex-Lehman executive and foreigner, Jasjit “Jesse” Bhattal, a native of India, was promoted to the committee. Nomura’s deputy president and chief operating officer, Takumi Shibata, said, “When your business is global, management needs to be global.” Discussion Questions 1. What obvious cultural differences between Nomura and Lehman do you see in this situation? 2. What global attitude do you think characterizes Nomura? Be specific in your description. Do you see any evidence of that changing? 93 94 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES 3. Do some cultural research on Japan and the United States. Compare those cultural characteristics. What similarities and differences exist? How might these cultural differences be affecting the situation at Nomura? 4. What could Nomura managers do to support, promote, and encourage cultural awareness among employees? Explain. 5. What do you think the statement, “When your business is global, management needs to be global,” is saying? In your opinion, is Nomura doing this? Explain. CHAPTER 3 | MANAGING IN A GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT Answers to “Who Owns What” Quiz 1. d. Switzerland Nestlé SA bought both the Tombstone and DiGiorno frozen-pizza brands from Kraft Foods in 2009. 2. c. United States The maker of Lebedyansky juices was acquired by PepsiCo Inc. and Pepsi Bottling Group Inc. in March 2008. 3. a. United States Rajah Spices are products of the Lea & Perrins sauce division, which the H.J. Heinz Company acquired in June of 2005. 4. b. India Tetley Tea is owned by the Tata Tea Group, a subsidiary of Indian conglomerate Tata Group. 5. d. China Ford Motor Company sold the Volvo brand to Chinese car maker Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co. in March 2010. 6. a. The Netherlands Mexico’s second-largest beer producer was acquired by Heineken N.V. in January 2010. 7. b. Mexico Grupo Bimbo, one of the world’s largest bakeries, bought the rights to make and distribute Boboli pizza crusts in 2002. 8. c. United States Braun electric shavers are a part of Global Gillette, which was purchased by the Procter & Gamble Company in October 2005. 9. c. France LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA, the world’s largest luxury-goods group, owns Sephora. 10. d. South Korea The Boston-based Barbarian Group was acquired by South Korea’s largest advertising agency, Cheil Worldwide, in December 2009. 11. c. Switzerland Nestlé SA purchased the maker of Lean Cuisine frozen meals in 2002. 12. a. Russia Russian tycoon Alexander Lebedev acquired the Independent in March 2010. 13. b. United Kingdom French’s mustard is a product of Reckitt-Benckiser. 14. a. India Tata Coffee, a division of Indian conglomerate Tata Group, purchased Eight O’Clock Coffee in 2006. 15. b. United States Consumer products giant Procter & Gamble purchased the luxury hair-care brand from a private equity firm in 2008. 95 4 chapter Let’s Get Real: Meet the Manager Kim Scartelli Multiple Franchise Owner and Consultant Curves for Women Canton, MI MY JOB: You’ll be hearing more from this real manager throughout the chapter. I am a multiple franchise owner for Curves fitness center franchises in southeastern Michigan. I am responsible for the marketing, financials, and operations of my locations. BEST PART OF MY JOB: I love the flexibility and satisfaction that comes with owning my own business. I worked in corporate America for six years before starting my own business. It’s wonderful to be in control of a large part of the personal success that comes with being your own boss. Managing Diversity 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 Define workplace diversity and explain why managing it is so important. page 98 Describe the changing workplaces in the United States and around the world. page 102 Explain the different types of diversity found in workplaces. page 105 Discuss the challenges managers face in managing diversity. page 110 Describe various workplace diversity management initiatives. page 112 LEARNING OUTCOMES WORST PART OF MY JOB: When a problem arises, I don’t always have someone to handle it so it falls on my shoulders. When you are at the top of your own company, there is no one to pass problems “up” to. It often feels like the responsibility is all mine. BEST MANAGEMENT ADVICE EVER RECEIVED: Surround yourself with people who have strengths and abilities different from you. They help fill in the gaps of your weaknesses and make your organization more effective. 97 A Manager’s Dilemma Companies across Europe have a management to 30 percent by the end of 2015, up problem—a large gender gap in from 12 percent today. With this announcement, the leadership. 1 Men far outnumber company becomes the first member of the DAX 30 women in senior business leadership index of blue-chip German companies to introduce positions. This dismal picture of sex- a gender quota. Deutsche’s chief executive René ism in Europe exists despite efforts Obermann (pictured on right) said,“Taking on more and campaigns to try and ensure women in management positions is not about the equality in the workplace. But one enforcement of misconstrued egalitarianism. Hav- European company is tackling the ing a greater number of women at the top will quite problem head-on. simply enable us to operate better.” Deutsche Telekom, Europe’s largest In addition to its plans to intensify recruiting of telecommunication company, says female university graduates, Deutsche Telekom will that it intends to “more than double need to make changes in its corporate policies and the number of women who are man- practices to attract and keep women in manage- agers within five years.” In addition, ment positions. it plans to increase the number of women in senior and middle What Would You Do? Although Deutsche Telekom’s goal of bringing more women into leadership positions is admirable, it’s not alone in its inability to diversify its management ranks. Even in the United States, where women have been graduating with advanced professional degrees in record numbers, the number in senior leadership positions remains low—only 3 percent of Fortune 500 companies have female CEOs.2 Clearly, the issue of moving beyond a homogeneous workforce is one that is important for today’s managers. In this chapter we’ll look closer at managing diversity of all kinds in the workplace. LEARNING OUTCOME Define workplace diversity and explain why managing it is so important. 4.1 Diversity 101 Walking through the lobby of one of MGM Mirage’s hotels, Brenda Thompson, the company’s director of diversity and leadership education notes, “It’s amazing all the different languages I can hear. . . . Our guests come from all over the world, and it makes us realize the importance of reflecting that diversity in our workplace.” And Thompson has been instrumental in developing a program at MGM that is all “about maximizing 100 percent inclusion of everyone in the organization.”3 Such diversity can be found in many organizational workplaces domestically and globally, and managers in those workplaces are looking for ways to value and develop that diversity, just as Brenda Thompson is doing. However, before we look at what it takes to manage diversity, we first have to know what workplace diversity is and why it’s important. What Is Workplace Diversity? Look around your classroom (or your workplace). You’re likely to see young/old, male/ female, tall/short, blonde hair, blue-eyed/dark hair, brown-eyed, any number of races, and any variety of dress styles. You’ll see people who speak up in class and others who are content to keep their attention on taking notes or daydreaming. Have you ever noticed your own little world of diversity where you are right now? Many of you may have grown up in an environment around diverse individuals, while others may not have had that experience. We want to focus on workplace diversity, so let’s look at what it is. By looking at various ways that diversity has been defined, you’ll gain a better understanding of it. Diversity has been “one of the most popular business topics over the last two decades. It ranks with modern business disciplines such as quality, leadership, and ethics. Despite this 98 CHAPTER 4 | MANAGING DIVERSITY popularity, it’s also one of the most controversial and least understood topics.”4 With its basis in civil rights legislation and social justice, the word diversity often invokes a variety of attitudes and emotional responses in people. Diversity has traditionally been considered a term used by human resources departments, associated with fair hiring practices, discrimination, and inequality. But diversity today is considered to be so much more. Exhibit 4-1 illustrates an historical overview of how the concept and meaning of workforce diversity has evolved. Let’s take a look at some of the ways diversity has been defined. For instance, at State Farm, the number one provider of auto insurance in the United States, diversity is viewed as “the collective strength of experiences, skills, talents, perspectives, and cultures that each agent and employee brings to State Farm.”5 Dictionary definitions of diversity refer to variety, differences, multiformity (instead of uniformity), or dissimilarities (instead of similarities). The Society for Human Resource Management, an association of human resource professionals, says that “diversity is often used to refer to differences based on ethnicity, gender, age, religion, disability, national origin and sexual orientation,” but it also encompasses an “infinite range of unique characteristics and experiences, including communication styles, physical characteristics such as height and weight, and speed of learning and comprehension.”6 Another definition says that diversity is all the ways in which people differ.7 One final definition of diversity is the “array of physical and cultural differences that constitute the spectrum of human differences.”8 One important thing to note about these diversity definitions is that they focus on all the ways in which people can differ. And that’s significant because diversity is no longer viewed as simply specific categories like race, gender, age, or disability but has broadened to a more inclusive recognition of the spectrum of differences. So, what’s our definition of workplace diversity? We’re defining it as the ways in which people in an organization are different from and similar to one another. Notice that our definition not only focuses on the differences, but the similarities of employees. EXHIBIT 4-1 1960s to 1970s Focus on complying with laws and regulations: Title VII of Civil Rights Act; Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; affirmative action policies and programs Early 1980s Focus on assimilating minorities and women into corporate setting: Corporate programs developed to help improve self-confidence and qualifications of diverse individuals so they can “fit in” Late 1980s Concept of workforce diversity expanded from compliance to an issue of business survival: Publication of Workforce 2000 opened business leaders’ eyes about the future composition of workforce—that is, more diverse; first use of term workforce diversity Late 1980s to Late 1990s Focus on fostering sensitivity: Shift from compliance and focusing only on women and minorities to including everyone; making employees more aware and sensitive to the needs and differences of others New Millennium Focus on diversity and inclusion for business success: Workforce diversity seen as core business issue; important to achieve business success, profitability, and growth Based on Ernst & Young, “The New Global Mindset: Driving Innovation Through Diversity,” EYGM Limited, 2010, pp. 5–6; and R. Anand and M. Frances Winters, “A Retrospective View of Corporate Diversity Training from 1964 to the Present,” Academy of Management Learning & Education, September 2008, pp. 356–372. workforce diversity The ways in which people in an organization are different from and similar to one another Timeline of the Evolution of Workforce Diversity 99 100 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES This reinforces our belief that managers and organizations should view employees as having qualities in common as well as differences that separate them. It doesn’t mean that those differences are any less important, but that our focus as managers is in finding ways to develop strong relationships with and engage our entire workforce. We want to point out one final thing about our description of “what” workforce diversity is:9 The demographic characteristics that we tend to think of when we think of diversity—age, race, gender, ethnicity, etc.—are just the tip of the iceberg. These demographic differences reflect surface-level diversity, which are easily perceived differences that may trigger certain stereotypes, but that do not necessarily reflect the ways people think or feel. Such surface-level differences in characteristics can affect the way people perceive others, especially when it comes to assumptions or stereotyping. However, as people get to know one another, these surface-level differences become less important and deep-level diversity—differences in values, personality, and work preferences—becomes more important. These deep-level differences can affect the way people view organizational work rewards, communicate, react to leaders, negotiate, and generally behave at work. Why Is Managing Workforce Diversity So Important? Ranked number 2 on Diversity Inc.’s list of top 50 companies for diversity, voice communications services company AT&T recognizes the powerful benefits of diversity. The company’s chief diversity officer says, “We know that diverse, talented and dedicated people are critical to AT&T’s success. Investing in a well-educated diverse workforce may be the single most important thing we can to do help America remain the leader in a digital, global economy.”10 BP, the British-owned energy company believes that “supplier diversity—that is, using minority or women suppliers—ensures that it gets the best products and services at the lowest price.”11 Many companies besides AT&T and BP are experiencing the benefits that diversity can bring. In this section, we want to look at why workforce diversity is so important to organizations. The benefits fall into three main categories: people management, organizational performance, and strategic. (See Exhibit 4-2.) EXHIBIT 4-2 Benefits of Workforce Diversity People Management • Better use of employee talent • Increased quality of team problem-solving efforts • Ability to attract and retain employees of diverse backgrounds Organizational Performance • Reduced costs associated with high turnover, absenteeism, and lawsuits • Enhanced problem-solving ability • Improved system flexibility Strategic • Increased understanding of the marketplace, which improves ability to better market to diverse consumers • Potential to improve sales growth and increase market share • Potential source of competitive advantage because of improved innovation efforts • Viewed as moral and ethical; the “right” thing to do Sources: Based on Ernst & Young, “The New Global Mindset: Driving Innovation Through Diversity,” EYGM Limited, 2010; M. P. Bell, M. L. Connerley, and F. K. Cocchiara, “The Case for Mandatory Diversity Education,” Academy of Management Learning & Education, December 2009, pp. 597–609; E. Kearney, D. Gebert, and S. C. Voelpel, “When and How Diversity Benefits Teams: The Importance of Team Members’ Need for Cognition,” Academy of Management Journal, June 2009, pp. 581–598; J. A. Gonzalez and A. S. DeNisi, “Cross-Level Effects of Demography and Diversity Climate on Organizational Attachment and Firm Effectiveness,” Journal of Organizational Behavior, January 2009, pp. 21–40; O. C. Richard, “Racial Diversity, Business Strategy, and Firm Performance: A ResourceBased View,” Academy of Management Journal, April 2000, pp. 164–177; and G. Robinson and K. Dechant, “Building a Business Case for Diversity,” Academy of Management Executive, August 1997, pp. 21–31. CHAPTER 4 | MANAGING DIVERSITY 101 PEOPLE MANAGEMENT. When all is said and done, diversity is, after all, about people, both inside and outside the organization. The people management benefits that organizations get because of their workforce diversity efforts revolve around attracting and retaining a talented workforce. Organizations want a talented workforce because it’s the people— their skills, abilities, and experiences—who make an organization successful. Positive and explicit workforce diversity efforts can help organizations attract and keep talented diverse people and make the best of the talents those individuals bring to the workplace. In addition, another important people management benefit is that as companies rely more on employee teams in the workplace, those work teams with diverse backgrounds often bring different and unique perspectives to discussions, which can result in more creative ideas and solutions. However, recent research has indicated that such benefits might be hard to come by in teams performing more interdependent tasks over a long period of time. Such situations also present more opportunities for conflicts and resentments to build.12 But, as the researchers pointed out, that simply means that those teams may need stronger team training and coaching to facilitate group decision making and conflict resolution. ORGANIZATIONAL PERFORMANCE The performance benefits that organizations get from workforce diversity include cost savings and improvements in organizational functioning. The cost savings can be significant when organizations that cultivate a diverse workforce reduce employee turnover, absenteeism, and the chance of lawsuits. For instance, the upscale retailer Abercrombie & Fitch paid $50 million to people who alleged in a lawsuit and two class-action suits that it discriminated against minorities and women.13 That’s an amount of money that can seriously affect an organization’s bottom line. In 2009, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission reported 93,277 workplace discrimination claims were filed, the second highest total number of claims ever filed. But more startling than the total number of claims filed was the monetary relief obtained for victims, which totaled more than $376 million.14 Workforce diversity efforts can reduce the risk of such lawsuits. In addition, a recent report by recruiting firm Korn/Ferry International found that U.S. companies waste $64 billion annually by losing and replacing employees who leave their jobs “solely due to failed diversity management.”15 That same report noted that 34 percent of those who left jobs because of diversity-related issues would have stayed if managers had recognized their abilities. Finally, organizational performance can be enhanced through workforce diversity because of improved problem-solving abilities and system flexibility. An organization with a diverse workforce can tap into the variety of skills and abilities represented and just the fact that its workforce is diverse requires that processes and procedures be more accommodative and inclusive. STRATEGIC Organizations benefit strategically from a diverse workforce, as well. You have to look at managing workforce diversity as the key to extracting the best talent, performance, market share, and suppliers from a diverse country and world. One important strategic benefit is that with a diverse workforce, organizations can better anticipate and respond to changing consumer needs. Diverse employees bring a variety of points of view and approaches to opportunities, which can improve how the organization markets to diverse consumers. For instance, as the Hispanic population has grown, so have organizational efforts to market products and services to that demographic group. Organizations have found their Hispanic employees to be a fertile source of insights that would otherwise not have been available. Food service companies, retailers, financial services companies, and automobile manufacturers are just a few of the industries that have seen sales and market share increases because they paid attention to the needs of diverse consumers using information from employees. A diverse workforce also can be a powerful source of competitive advantage, primarily because innovation thrives in such an environment. A recent report by Ernst & Young stated surface-level diversity deep-level diversity Easily perceived differences that may trigger certain stereotypes, but that do not necessarily reflect the ways people think or feel Differences in values, personality, and work preferences Diversity is important because not everyone has a perfect skill set or universal set of life experiences. The more your workplace reflects your customer base, the more successful you can be. 102 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES that, “Cultural diversity offers the flexibility and creativity we need to re-create the global economy for the twenty-first century.”16 Innovation is never easy, but in a globalized world, it’s even more challenging. Tapping into differing voices and viewpoints can be powerful factors in steering innovation. Companies that want to lead their industries have to find ways to “stir the pot”—to generate the lively debate that can create those new ideas. And research shows that diverse viewpoints can do that. “Diversity powers innovation, helping businesses generate new products and services.”17 Finally, from an ethical perspective, workforce diversity and effectively managing diversity is the right thing to do. Although many societies have laws that say it’s illegal to treat diverse people unfairly, many cultures also exhibit a strong ethical belief that diverse people should have access to equal opportunities and be treated fairly and justly. Businesses do have an ethical imperative to build relationships that value and enable all employees to be successful. Managers need to view workforce diversity as a way to bring different voices to the table and to build an environment based on trusting relationships. If they can do that, good things can happen, as we’ve noted. LEARNING OUTCOME Describe the changing workplaces in the United States and around the world. 4.2 The Changing Workplace An African American as the chief executive of the United States. A woman heading up the State Department. A Latina sitting on the nation’s highest court. Even at the highest levels of the political arena, we see a diverse workplace. In the business world, the once predominantly white male managerial workforce has given way to a more gender-balanced, multiethnic workforce. But it’s a workforce still in transition as the overall population changes. In this section, we want to look at some of those changes, focusing on demographic trends by looking first at the characteristics of the U.S. population and then at global diversity trends. These trends will be reflected in a changing workplace, thus making this information important for managers to recognize and understand. Characteristics of the U.S. Population Statistics from the 2010 U.S. Census are likely to reinforce what we’ve already seen happening—we are an increasingly diverse society with some major readjustments occurring that will dramatically change the face of America by the year 2050. Let’s look at some of the most dramatic of these changes.18 Total population of the United States: The total population is projected to increase to 438 million by the year 2050, up from 296 million in 2005; 82 percent of that increase will be due to immigrants and their U.S.-born descendants. Nearly one in five Americans will be an immigrant in 2050, compared with one in eight in 2005. Racial/ethnic groups: In addition to total population changes, the components of that population are projected to change as well. Exhibit 4-3 provides the projected population breakdown. As the projections show, the main changes will be in the percentages of the Hispanic and white population. But the data also indicate that the Asian population will almost double. EXHIBIT 4-3 Changing Population Makeup of the United States Foreign-born Racial/Ethnic Groups White* Hispanic Black* Asian* 2005 2050 12% 19% 67% 14% 13% 5% 47% 29% 13% 9% *= Non-Hispanic American Indian/Alaska Native not included. Sources: H. El Nasser, “U.S. Hispanic Population to Triple by 2050,” USA Today Online [www.usatoday .com], February 12, 2008; and “U.S. Population Projections: 2005–2050,” Pew Research Center [http://pewhispanic.org/reports/], February 11, 2008. CHAPTER 4 | MANAGING DIVERSITY 103 Canada, like the United States, is becoming an increasingly diverse society with population trends that will continue to have a major impact on Canadian workplaces. When Gordon Nixon assumed the leadership of the Royal Bank of Canada as CEO, he created a diversity council as the first step in a drive to effectively manage a workforce that reflects the makeup of the bank’s customer base. By actively recruiting women, immigrants, and minorities, RBC has earned a reputation for inclusiveness that helps it attract top female and minority talent and has developed a motivated workforce that results in better customer service and financial performance. An aging population. As a nation, our population is aging. According to the CIA World Factbook, the median age of the U.S. population stands at 36.7 years, up from 36.2 years in 2001.19 That’s quite a change, although not unexpected. In the first half of the twentieth century, America was a relatively “young” country, the result of lots of babies being born, declining infant and childhood mortality, and high rates of immigration. By 2050, however, one in every five persons will be aged 65 or over. The “oldest” of this group— those aged 80 and over—will be the most populous age group comprising 8 percent of the entire U.S. population. “Aging will continue to be one of the most important defining characteristics of the population.”20 As you can probably imagine, such population trends are likely to have a major impact on U.S. workplaces. What workplace changes might we see? According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, by the year 2016, 47 percent of the labor force will be women and 37 percent will be Black, Latino, Asian/Pacific Islander, American Indian, or multiple racial categories.21 In addition, by 2016, the average age of an employee will be 42.1 years.22 The immigration issue is also likely to be a factor in a changing workplace. According to a recent analysis released by the U.S. Census Bureau, nearly one in six American workers is foreign-born, the highest proportion since the 1920s.23 Despite the perception that the surge in immigration, especially over the last two decades, has flooded the United States with low-wage foreign labor, a new analysis of census data indicates that’s not the reality. In 14 of the 25 largest metropolitan areas, more immigrants were employed in white-collar occupations than in lower-wage jobs like construction, cleaning, or manufacturing.24 And now, with the total number of immigrants increasing dramatically, this, too, is likely to affect workplaces. Finally, people now entering the workforce are significantly younger, more ethnically diverse and/or foreign-born. In fact, by the year 2016, it’s forecasted that 68 percent of new entrants in the U.S. workforce will be women or people of color.25 The reality of these trends for businesses is that they’ll have to accommodate and embrace such workforce changes. Although America historically has been known as a “melting pot” where people of different nationalities, religions, races, and ethnicities have blended together to become one, that perspective is no longer relevant. Organizations must recognize that they can’t expect employees to assimilate into the organization by adopting similar attitudes and values. Instead, there’s value in the differences that people bring to the workplace. It’s not been easy. The ability of managers and organizations to effectively manage diversity has not kept pace with these population changes, creating challenges for minorities, women, and older employees. But many businesses are excelling at managing diversity and we’ll discuss some of their workplace diversity initiatives in a later section of this chapter. What About Global Workforce Changes? Some significant worldwide population trends also are likely to affect global workforces. According to United Nations forecasts, “The world is in the midst of an epochal demographic shift that will reshape societies, economies, and markets over the next century.”26 Let’s look at two of these trends.27 104 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES Total world population. The total world population in 2010 is estimated at almost 7 billion individuals. However, that number is forecasted to hit 9 billion by 2050, at which point the United Nations predicts the total population will either stabilize or peak after growing for centuries at an ever-accelerating rate. The main reason for this major shift is the decline in birthrates as nations advance economically. However, in developing countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean, and Oceania, birthrates remain high. One of the benefits is that many of these countries are likely to experience a “demographic dividend: a rising proportion of young people entering the workforce, driving productivity and economic growth.”28 An aging population. This demographic trend is one of critical importance for organizations. How critical? “The world’s population is now aging at an unprecedented rate.”29 How much do you know about global aging? (Our guess is . . . probably not much!) Take the quiz in Exhibit 4-4—no peeking at the answers beforehand—and see how well you scored. Were you surprised by some of the answers? When we say the world’s population is aging, some of the realities of this trend are hard to even fathom. For instance, people aged 65 and older will soon outnumber children under age 5 for the first time in history. Also, the world’s population aged 80 and over is projected to increase 233 percent between the years 2008 and 2040. The implications of EXHIBIT 4-4 Global Aging: How Much Do You Know? 1. True or False: The world’s children under age 5 outnumber people aged 65 and over. 2. The world’s older population (65 and older) increased by approximately how many people each month in 2008? a. 75,000 b. 350,000 c. 600,000 d. 870,000 3. Which of the world’s developing regions has the highest percentage of older people? a. Africa b. Latin America c. The Caribbean d. Asia 4. True or False: More than half of the world’s older people live in the industrialized nations of Europe, North America, Japan, and Australia. 5. Which country had the world’s highest percentage of older people in 2008? a. Sweden b. Japan c. Spain d. Italy Answers to quiz: 1. True. Although the world’s population is aging, children still outnumber older people as of 2008. Projections indicate, however, that in fewer than 10 years, older people will outnumber children for the first time in history. 2. d. The estimated change in the total size of the world’s older population between July 2007 and July 2008 was more than 10.4 million people, an average of 870,000 each month. 3. c. The Caribbean, with 7.8 percent of all people aged 65 and over in 2008. Numbers for the other regions: Latin America, 6.4 percent; Asia (excluding Japan), 6.2 percent; and Africa, 3.3 percent. 4. False. Although industrialized nations have higher percentages of older people than do most developing countries, 62 percent of all people aged 65 and over now live in the developing regions of Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean, and Oceania. 5. b. Japan, with 22 percent of its population aged 65 or over, has supplanted Italy as the world’s oldest major country. Source: Based on K. Kinsella and W. He, “An Aging World: 2008,” U.S. Census Bureau/International Population Reports, June 2009. CHAPTER 4 | MANAGING DIVERSITY 105 these trends for societies and businesses are profound—from changing family structures to shifting patterns of work and retirement to emerging economic challenges based on increasing demands on social entitlement programs, dwindling labor supply, and declining total global savings rates. Such demographic shifts will reshape the global workforce and organizational workplaces. Again, managers and organizations need to understand how such changes are likely to affect future workplace policies and practices. Types of Workplace Diversity As we’ve seen so far, diversity is a big issue, and an important issue, in today’s workplaces. What types of dissimilarities—that is, diversity—do we find in those workplaces? Exhibit 4-5 shows several types of workplace diversity. Let’s work our way through the different types. 4.3 LEARNING OUTCOME Explain the different types of diversity found in workplaces. Age As we saw in the last section, the aging population is a major critical shift taking place in the workforce. With many of the nearly 85 million baby boomers still employed and active in the workforce, managers must ensure that those employees are not discriminated against because of age. Both Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 prohibit age discrimination. And the Age Discrimination Act also restricts mandatory retirement at specific ages. In addition to complying with these laws, organizations need programs and policies in place that provide for fair and equal treatment of their older employees. One issue with older workers is the perception that people have of those workers. Perceptions such as they’re sick more often and they can’t work as hard or as fast as younger employees—perceptions that are inaccurate. Employers have mixed feelings about older workers.30 On the positive side, they believe that older workers bring a number of good qualities to the job including experience, judgment, a strong work ethic, and a commitment to doing quality work. However, they also view older workers as not being flexible or adaptable and being more resistant to new technology. The challenge for managers is overcoming those misperceptions of older workers and the widespread belief that work performance and work quality decline with age. Another issue that also supports the need for effectively managing workplace age diversity is that as baby boomers do retire, experts point out that some industries will face severe shortages of qualified employees. “Many of today’s growth industries require a higher level EXHIBIT 4-5 Types of Diversity Found in Workplaces Age Other Gender Race and Ethnicity GLBT Religion Disability/ Abilities 106 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES of technical competence in quantitative reasoning, problem solving, and communication skills . . . and the United States simply does not have enough students who are getting solid math and science education.”31 Organizations that do not plan for such a future may find themselves struggling to find a competent workforce, diverse or not. Finally, the aging population is not the only age-related issue facing organizations. Some 50 million Generation Xers juggle work and family responsibilities. And now some 76 million members of Generation Y are either already in or poised to enter the workforce.32 Having grown up in a world where they’ve had the opportunity to experience many different things, Gen Y workers bring their own ideas and approaches to the workplace. Managers need to ensure that these workers, regardless of age, also are treated fairly and as valuable assets. Effectively managing an organization’s diverse age groups can lead to their working well with each other, learning from each other, and taking advantage of the different perspectives and experiences that each has to offer. It can be a win-win situation for all. Gender Women (49.8%) and men (50.2%) now each make up almost half of the workforce.33 Yet, gender diversity issues are still quite prevalent in organizations. Take the gender pay gap. The latest information on the ratio of women’s to men’s median weekly earnings showed the figure at 80.2; the ratio for median annual earnings stood at 77.1.34 Other issues involve career start and progress. Although 57 percent of today’s college students are women, and women are just as likely to have completed college and hold an advanced degree, inequities persist.35 Research by Catalyst found that men start their careers at higher levels than do women. And after starting out behind, women don’t ever catch up. Men move further up the career ladder and faster as well.36 Finally, misconceptions, mistaken beliefs, and unsupported opinions still exist about whether women perform their jobs as well as men do. You can see why gender diversity issues are important to attend to. So what do we know about differences between men and women in the workplace? First of all, few, if any, important differences between men and women affect job performance.37 No consistent male-female differences exist in problem-solving ability, analytical skills, competitive drive, motivation, sociability, or learning ability. Psychological research has found minor differences: Women tend to be more agreeable and willing to conform to authority while men are more aggressive and more likely to have expectations of success. Another area where we also see differences between genders is in preference for work schedules, especially when the employee has preschool-age children. To accommodate their family responsibilities, working mothers are more likely to prefer part-time work, flexible work schedules, and telecommuting. They also prefer jobs that encourage work–life balance. One question of much interest as it relates to gender is whether men and women are equally competent as managers. Research evidence indicates that a “good” manager is still perceived as predominantly masculine.38 But the reality is that women tend to use a broader, more effective range of leadership styles to motivate and engage people. They usually blend traditional masculine styles—being directive, authoritative, and leading by example—with more feminine ones that include being nurturing, inclusive, and collaborative. Men tend to rely primarily on masculine styles.39 Another study showed that women managers were significantly more likely than their male counterparts to coach and develop others and to create more committed, collaborative, inclusive, and ultimately, more effective, teams. This study also found that women were more likely to foster genuine collaboration while males were far more likely to view negotiations and other business transactions as zero-sum games.40 What should you take away from this discussion? Not that either women or men are the superior employees, but a better appreciation for why it’s important for organizations to explore the strengths that both women and men bring to an organization and the barriers they face in contributing fully to organizational efforts. CHAPTER 4 | MANAGING DIVERSITY 107 When Kumi Hatsukano joined Nissan Motor, she experienced sexism and harassment at work. Today, she is a manager at a Nissan factory and is reaping the benefits of the automaker’s initiative in Japan called “Women in the Driver’s Seat: Gender Diversity as a Lever in Japan.” Including women as decision makers and in positions of authority resulted from research that identified women as influencers of two-thirds of all car purchases. Nissan’s resulting diversity strategy includes female career advisors, career development events, technical training programs, and incorporating the female perspective in the company’s design, manufacturing, selling, and customer service operations. Race and Ethnicity There’s a long and controversial history in the United States and in other parts of the world over race and how people react to and treat others of a different race. Race and ethnicity are important types of diversity in organizations. We’re going to define race as the biological heritage (including physical characteristics such as one’s skin color and associated traits) that people use to identify themselves. Most people identify themselves as part of a racial group. Such racial classifications are an integral part of a country’s cultural, social, and legal environments. The racial choices on the 2010 Census included white, black, American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, and some other race. This last choice, which was on the 2000 Census form for the first time, provided respondents the opportunity to identify themselves as multiracial.41 The Census Bureau’s chief of the racial statistics branch says, “Multiracial Americans are one of the fastest-growing demographic groups in the country.”42 Ethnicity is related to race, but it refers to social traits—such as one’s cultural background or allegiance—that are shared by a human population. As we saw earlier in Exhibit 4-3, the racial and ethnic diversity of the U.S. population is increasing at an exponential rate. We’re also seeing this same effect in the composition of the workforce. Most of the research on race and ethnicity as they relate to the workplace has looked at hiring decisions, performance evaluations, pay, and workplace discrimination.43 However, much of that research has focused on the differences in attitudes and outcomes between Whites and African Americans. Minimal study has been done on issues relevant to Asian, Hispanic, and Native American populations. Let’s look at a few key findings. One finding is that individuals in workplaces tend to favor colleagues of their own race in performance evaluations, promotion decisions, and pay raises. Although such effects are small, they are consistent. Next, research shows substantial racial differences in attitudes toward affirmative action, with African Americans favoring such programs to a greater degree than Whites. Other research shows that African Americans generally do worse than Whites in decisions related to the workplace. For instance, in employment interviews, African Americans receive lower ratings. In the job setting, they receive lower job performance ratings, are paid less, and are promoted less frequently. However, no statistically significant differences between the two races are observed in absenteeism rates, applied social skills at work, or accident rates. As you can see, race and ethnicity issues are a key focus for managers in effectively managing workforce diversity. race ethnicity The biological heritage (including skin color and associated traits) that people use to identify themselves Social traits (such as cultural background or allegiance) that are shared by a human population 108 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES Disability/Abilities 1990 was a watershed year for persons with disabilities. That was the year the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) became law. ADA prohibits discrimination against persons with disabilities and also requires employers to make reasonable accommodations so their workplaces are accessible to people with physical or mental disabilities and enable them to effectively perform their jobs. With the law’s enactment, individuals with disabilities became a more representative and integral part of the U.S. workforce. One issue facing managers and organizations is that the definition of disability is quite broad. The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission classifies a person as disabled if he or she has any physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities. For instance, deafness, chronic back pain, AIDS, missing limbs, seizure disorder, schizophrenia, diabetes, and alcoholism would all qualify. However, since these conditions have almost no common features, it’s been difficult to study how each condition affects employment. It’s obvious that some jobs cannot be accommodated to a disability. For instance, the law recognizes that a visually impaired person could not be an airline pilot, a person with severe cerebral palsy could not be a surgeon, and a person with profound mobility constraints could not be a firefighter. However, computer technology and other adaptive devices have shattered many employment barriers for other employees with disabilities. Even after 20-plus years of the ADA, organizations and managers still have fears about employing disabled workers. A survey by the U.S. Department of Labor looked at these unfounded fears.44 Exhibit 4-6 describes some of those fears as well as the reality; that is, what it’s really like. Let’s look at one company’s experience. Walgreen has hired individuals with mental and physical disabilities to work at its distribution center in Anderson, South Carolina.45 These employees work in one of three departments: case check-in (where merchandise initially comes in), de-trash (where merchandise is unpacked), or picking (where products are sorted into tubs based on individual store orders). Using an innovative approach that included job coaches, automated processes, and comprehensive training, Walgreen now has a capable and trusted workforce. The company’s senior vice president of distribution said, “One thing we found is they (the disabled employees) can all do the job. What surprised us is the environment that it’s created. It’s a building where everybody helps each other out.” In effectively managing a workforce with disabled employees, managers need to create and maintain an environment in which employees feel comfortable disclosing their need EXHIBIT 4-6 Employers’ Fears About Disabled Workers FEAR: Hiring people with disabilities leads to higher employment costs and lower profit margins • REALITY: Absentee rates for sick time are virtually equal between employees with and without disabilities; workers’ disabilities are not a factor in formulas calculating insurance costs for workers’ compensation FEAR: Workers with disabilities lack job skills and experience necessary to perform as well as their abled counterparts • REALITY: Commonplace technologies such as the Internet and voice-recognition software have eliminated many of the obstacles for workers with disabilities; many individuals with disabilities have great problem-solving skills from finding creative ways to perform tasks that others may take for granted FEAR: Uncertainty over how to take potential disciplinary action with a worker with disabilities • REALITY: A person with a disability for whom workplace accommodations have been provided has the same obligations and rights as far as job performance FEAR: High costs associated with accommodating disabled employees • REALITY: Most workers with disabilities require no accommodation but for those who do, more than half of the workplace modifications cost $500 or less Sources: R. Braum, “Disabled Workers: Employer Fears Are Groundless,” Bloomberg BusinessWeek Online, October 2, 2009; and U.S. Department of Labor/Office of Disability Employment Policy, “Survey of Employer Perspectives on the Employment of People with Disabilities [http://www.dol.gov/odep/documents/survey_ report_jan_09.doc], November 2008. CHAPTER 4 | MANAGING DIVERSITY 109 for accommodation. Those accommodations, by law, need to enable individuals with disabilities to perform their jobs but they also need to be perceived as equitable by those not disabled. That’s the balancing act that managers face. Religion Hani Khan, a college sophomore, worked for three months as a stock clerk at a Hollister clothing store in San Francisco.46 One day, she was told by her supervisors to remove the head scarf that she wears in observance of Islam (known as a hijab) because it violated the company’s “look policy” (which instructs employees on clothing, hair styles, makeup, and accessories they may wear to work). She refused on religious grounds and was fired one week later. Like a number of other Muslim women (425 in 2009 alone), she filed a federal job discrimination complaint. A spokesperson for Abercrombie & Fitch (Hollister’s parent company) said, “If any Abercrombie associate identifies a religious conflict with an Abercrombie policy . . . the company will work with the associate in an attempt to find an accommodation.” That’s a step in the right direction. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act prohibits discrimination on the basis of religion (as well as race/ethnicity, country of origin, and sex). Today, it seems that the greatest religious diversity issue in the United States revolves around Islam, especially after 9/11.47 Islam is one of the world’s most popular religions and some 2 million Muslims live in the United States. For the most part, U.S. Muslims have attitudes similar to those of other U.S. citizens. However, there are real and perceived differences. For instance, nearly 4 in 10 U.S. adults admit they harbor negative feelings or prejudices toward U.S. Muslims and 52 percent believe U.S. Muslims are not respectful of women. Religious beliefs also can prohibit or encourage work behaviors. Many conservative Jews believe they should not work on Saturdays. Some Christians do not want to work on Sundays. Religious individuals may believe they have an obligation to express their beliefs in the workplace making it uncomfortable for those who may not share those beliefs. Some pharmacists have refused to give out RU-486 (the “morning after” abortion pill) on the basis of their beliefs. As you can see, religion and religious beliefs can generate misperceptions and negative feelings. You’d probably not be surprised to find out that the number of religious discrimination claims has been growing in the United States.48 In accommodating religious diversity, managers need to recognize and be aware of different religions and their beliefs, paying special attention to when certain religious holidays fall. Try to accommodate, when at all possible, employees who have special needs or requests, but do so in a way that other employees don’t view it as “special treatment.” GLBT: Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity The acronym GLBT—which refers to gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people—is being used more frequently and relates to the diversity of sexual orientation and gender identity.49 Sexual orientation has been called the “last acceptable bias.”50 We want to emphasize that we’re not condoning this perspective, but what this comment refers to is that most people understand that racial and ethnic stereotypes are “off-limits,” but it’s not unusual to hear derogatory comments about gays or lesbians. U.S. federal law does not prohibit discrimination against employees on the basis of sexual orientation, although many states and municipalities do. However, in Europe, the Employment Equality Directive required all European Union member states to introduce legislation making it unlawful to discriminate on grounds of sexual orientation.51 Despite the progress in making workplaces more accommodating of gays and lesbians, much more needs to be done. One study found more than 40 percent of gay and lesbian employees indicated that they had been unfairly treated, denied a promotion, or pushed to quit their job because of their sexual orientation.52 Employers in the United States have taken differing approaches to their treatment of sexual orientation.53 Many have adopted a variation of the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy of the military. Some just flat out do not hire any GLBT employees. However, according to a report from the Human Rights Campaign Foundation, 85 percent of the largest corporations You can accommodate special needs of different groups without appearing to show favoritism or offending other groups by implementing fair and consistent company policies that don’t give privileges to one group of people over another. 54 by the numbers 11 percent—the amount by which women underestimated the performance scores their bosses gave them. 80 percent of women feel that their worth is determined by what their companies choose to pay them. 79 75 percent of survey respondents believe that there is a definite generation gap. 78 percent of employees say that their companies do not practice diversity in their workforces as much as they claim publicly. 41 percent of employees say there’s more diversity in their workplace than was there 10 years ago. 30 percent of women say that the pay scale for women is the top barrier to women in the workplace. percent of corporate executives believe that having minorities in senior executive positions is important. 110 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES in the United States now prohibit employment discrimination based on sexual orientation and 35 percent prohibit bias based on gender identity.55 An increasing number of large companies are implementing policies and practices to protect the rights of GLBT employees in the workplace. For instance, Ernst & Young, S. C. Johnson & Sons, Inc., and Kodak, among others, all provide training to managers on ways to prevent sexual orientation discrimination. A diversity manager at IBM says, “We believe that having strong transgender and gender identification policies is a natural extension of IBM’s corporate culture.”56 And more than 57 percent of the largest corporations in the United States now offer their employees health insurance benefits for domestic partners.57 A recent study analyzed the effect of company GLBT nondiscrimination policies on that company’s stock market value. The findings suggest that the stock prices of companies with more progressive GLBT policies outperform those of competitors in the same industry that don’t have such policies.58 As with most of the types of diversity we’ve discussed in this section, managers need to look at how best to meet the needs of their GLBT employees. They need to respond to employees’ concerns while also creating a safe and productive work environment for all. Other Types of Diversity As we said earlier, diversity refers to any dissimilarities or differences that might be present in a workplace. Other types of workplace diversity that managers might confront and have to deal with include socioeconomic background (social class and income-related factors), team members from different functional areas or organizational units, physical attractiveness, obesity/thinness, job seniority, or intellectual abilities. Each of these types of diversity also can affect how employees are treated in the workplace. Again, managers need to ensure that all employees—no matter the similarities or dissimilarities—are treated fairly and given the opportunity and support to do their jobs to the best of their abilities. LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss the challenges managers face in managing diversity. 4.4 Challenges in Managing Diversity Although the nooses, racist graffiti, and Confederate battle flags should have been enough to warrant action, it wasn’t until an African American employee at a Texas-based plant of Turner Industries Group LLC discovered that he was being paid less as a painter than white workers were being paid finally complained.59 Soon after filing the complaint, he was fired. His complaints, along with those of seven other employees, “have led the federal government to conclude there was evidence of racial discrimination.” Despite the benefits that we know workforce diversity brings to organizations, managers still face challenges in creating accommodating and safe work environments for diverse employees. In this section, we’re going to look at two of those challenges: personal bias and the glass ceiling. Personal Bias Smokers. Working mothers. Football players. Blondes. Female president of the United States. Hispanic. What impressions come to mind when you read these words? Based on your background and experiences, you probably have pretty specific ideas and things you would say, maybe even to the point of characteristics you think that all smokers or all working mothers or all Hispanics share. Employees can and do bring such ideas about various groups of people with them into the workplace. Such ideas can lead to prejudice, discrimination, and stereotypes, all of which shape and influence our personal biases. Bias is a term that describes a tendency or preference toward a particular perspective or ideology. It’s generally seen as a “one-sided” perspective. Our personal biases cause us to have preconceived opinions about people or things. Such preconceived opinions can create all kinds of inaccurate judgments and attitudes. Let’s take a look at how our personal biases affect the way we view and respond to diversity. One outcome of our personal biases can be prejudice, a preconceived belief, opinion, or judgment toward a person or a group of people. Our prejudice can be based on all the types of diversity we discussed: race, gender, ethnicity, age, disability, religion, sexual orientation, or even other personal characteristics. CHAPTER 4 | MANAGING DIVERSITY A major factor in prejudice is stereotyping, which is judging a person on the basis of one’s perception of a group to which he or she belongs. For instance, “Married persons are more stable employees than single persons” is an example of stereotyping. Keep in mind, though, that not all stereotypes are inaccurate. For instance, asking someone in accounting about a budgeting problem you’re having would be an appropriate assumption and action. However, many stereotypes—red-haired people have a bad temper, elderly drivers are the most dangerous, working mothers aren’t as committed to their careers as men are, and so forth—aren’t factual and distort our judgment. Both prejudice and stereotyping can lead to someone treating others who are members of a particular group unequally. That’s what we call discrimination, which is when someone acts out their prejudicial attitudes toward people who are the targets of their prejudice. You’ll find in Exhibit 4-7 definitions and examples of different types of discrimination. Type of Discrimination EXHIBIT 4-7 Definition Examples from Organizations Discriminatory policies or practices Actions taken by representatives of the organization that deny equal opportunity to perform or unequal rewards for performance Older workers may be targeted for layoffs because they are highly paid and have lucrative benefits.a Sexual harassment Unwanted sexual advances and other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature that create a hostile or offensive work environment Salespeople at one company went on company-paid visits to strip clubs, brought strippers into the office to celebrate promotions, and fostered pervasive sexual rumors.b Intimidation Overt threats or bullying directed at members of specific groups of employees African American employees at some companies have found nooses hanging over their work stations.c Mockery and insults Jokes or negative stereotypes; sometimes the result of jokes taken too far Arab Americans have been asked at work whether they were carrying bombs or were members of terrorist organizations.d Exclusion Exclusion of certain people from job opportunities, social events, discussions, or informal mentoring; can occur unintentionally Many women in finance claim they are assigned to marginal job roles or are given light workloads that don’t lead to promotion.e Incivility Disrespectful treatment, including behaving in an aggressive manner, interrupting the person, or ignoring his or her opinions Female lawyers note that male attorneys frequently cut them off or do not adequately address their comments.f Notes: a. J. Levitz and P. Shishkin, “More Workers Cite Age Bias After Layoffs,” Wall Street Journal, March 11, 2009, pp. D1–D2. b. W. M. Bulkeley, “A Data-Storage Titan Confronts Bias Claims,” Wall Street Journal, September 12, 2007, pp. A1, A16. c. D. Walker, “Incident with Noose Stirs Old Memories,” McClatchy-Tribune Business News, June 29, 2008; and D. Solis, “Racial Horror Stories Keep EEOC Busy,” Knight-Ridder Tribune Business News, July 30, 2005, p. 1. d. H. Ibish and A. Stewart, Report on Hate Crimes and Discrimination Against Arab Americans: The Post-September 11 Backlash, September 11, 2001—October 11, 2001 (Washington, DC: American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, 2003). e. A. Raghavan, “Wall Street’s Disappearing Women,” Forbes, March 16, 2009, pp. 72–78. f. L. M. Cortina, “Unseen Injustice: Incivility as Modern Discrimination in Organizations.” Source: S. Robbins and T. Judge, Organizational Behavior, 14th ed., Prentice Hall, p. 43. bias stereotyping A tendency or preference toward a particular perspective or ideology Judging a person based on a perception of a group to which that person belongs prejudice discrimination A preconceived belief, opinion, or judgment toward a person or a group of people When someone acts out their prejudicial attitudes toward people who are the targets of their prejudice Forms of Discrimination 111 112 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES “To succeed in today’s fast-paced work environment, we must understand the needs and expectations of a diverse, multigenerational and global workforce.”60 That’s the commitment made by American Express to its employees. Sitting in the top spot at American Express is Kenneth I. Chenault, an African American, who was named by Black Enterprise magazine as number one on the list of the 100 most powerful executives in corporate America. Chenault is known for his friendliness and integrity as much as for his discipline and drive. His business acumen is unparalleled having successfully guided his company through the financial meltdown. But he also recognizes the importance of being a leader who knows the importance of attracting and retaining the highest caliber of employees. Chenault meets regularly with the company’s employee resource groups, holds senior executives personally responsible for meeting diversity goals, Many of these actions are prohibited by law so you won’t find them discussed in employee handbooks or organizational policy statements. However, you can still see these actions in workplaces. “As discrimination has increasingly come under both legal scrutiny and social disapproval, most overt forms have faded, which may have resulted in an increase in more covert forms like incivility or exclusion.”61 Discrimination, whether intentional or not, can lead to serious negative consequences for employers as illustrated by the example we discussed at the beginning of this section. But it’s not just the potential financial consequences organizations and managers face for discriminatory actions. It’s the reduced employee productivity, negative and disruptive interpersonal conflicts, increased employee turnover, and overall negative climate that can lead to serious problems for managers. Even if an organization has never had an employment discrimination lawsuit filed against it, managers need to aggressively work to eliminate unfair discrimination. Glass Ceiling Pretend that you’ve just finished your MBA degree. It’s not been easy. Your graduate classes were challenging, but you feel well-prepared for and excited about that first post-MBA job. If you’re female, that first job for 60 percent of you will be an entry-level position. However, if you’re male, only 46 percent of you would start out in an entry-level position.62 And 2 percent of women would make it to the CEO or senior executive position, although 6 percent of men would. “Although entry into occupations such as accounting, business, and law happens at about the same rate for men and women, evidence is mounting that women’s and men’s career paths begin to divide soon after.”63 This issue can be seen with minorities as well. Only a small percentage of both male and female Hispanics and African Americans have made it into management positions in the United States. What’s going on here? After all these years of “equal opportunity,” why do we still see statistics like these? In the 1980s, the term glass ceiling, first used in a Wall Street Journal article, refers to the invisible barrier that separates women and minorities from top management positions.64 The idea of a “ceiling” means that there is something blocking upward movement and the idea of “glass” is that whatever’s blocking the way isn’t immediately apparent. Research on the glass ceiling has looked at identifying the organizational practices and interpersonal biases that have blocked women’s advancement. Findings from those studies have ranged from lack of mentoring, sex stereotyping, views that associate masculine traits with leader effectiveness, and bosses’ perceptions of family–work conflict.65 As others have said, it’s time to shatter the glass ceiling for all employees. Every employee should have the opportunity to work in a career in which they can use their skills and abilities and to have a career path that allows them to progress however far they want to go. Getting to that end, however, isn’t going to be easy. As we’ll see in the next section, however, there are a number of workplace diversity initiatives that organizations can implement to work toward that end. and is a visible supporter of the company’s diversity initiatives. 4.5 LEARNING OUTCOME Describe various workplace diversity management initiatives. Workplace Diversity Initiatives “Marriott International is the textbook definition of a great company for diversity.”66 Bill Marriott, the company’s chairman and CEO, is a visible force and advocate for diversity both in the company and externally. He personally signs off on bonuses for his top staff, which are tied to diversity efforts and ability to meet diversity goals, an amount that can CHAPTER 4 | MANAGING DIVERSITY account for 13 percent of their compensation. The company also has mandatory diversity training every month and a number of employee resource groups that provide input and advice. Their diversity management efforts have earned the company the number 4 spot on the Top 50 Companies for Diversity list for 2009. As the Marriott example shows, some businesses are effectively managing diversity. In this section we want to look at various workplace diversity initiatives. Before we start discussing these, however, we want to look at the legal framework within which diversity efforts take place. The Legal Aspect of Workplace Diversity Would workplaces have evolved to the level of diversity that currently exists without federal legislation and mandates?67 Although it’s an interesting question, the fact is that federal laws have contributed to some of the social change we’ve seen over the last 50-plus years. Exhibit 4-8 describes the major equal employment opportunity laws with which organizations must comply. Failure to do so, as we have seen in some of the examples we’ve described, can be costly and damaging to an organization’s bottom line and reputation. It’s important that managers know what they can and cannot do legally and ensure that all employees understand as well. However, effectively managing workplace diversity needs to be more than understanding and complying with federal laws. Organizations that are successful at managing Year Law or Ruling Description 1963 Equal Pay Act Prohibits pay differences for equal work based on gender 1964 (amended in 1972) Civil Rights Act, Title VII Prohibits discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin, or gender 1967 (amended in 1978) Age Discrimination in Employment Act Prohibits discrimination against employees 40 years and older 1978 Pregnancy Discrimination Act Prohibits discrimination against women in employment decisions on the basis of pregnancy, childbirth, and related medical decisions 1978 Mandatory Retirement Act Prohibits the forced retirement of most employees 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act Prohibits discrimination against individuals who have disabilities or chronic illnesses; also requires reasonable accommodations for these individuals 1991 Civil Rights Act of 1991 1993 Family and Medical Leave Act Gives employees in organizations with 50 or more employees up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave each year for family or medical reasons 2009 Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act glass ceiling The invisible barrier that separates women and minorities from top management positions Reaffirms and tightens prohibition of discrimination and gives individuals right to sue for punitive damages Changes the statute of limitations on pay discrimination to 180 days from each paycheck EXHIBIT 4-8 Major Equal Employment Opportunity Laws 113 114 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES diversity use additional diversity initiatives and programs. We’re going to look at four of these including top management commitment, mentoring, diversity skills training, and employee resource groups. Top Management Commitment to Diversity Today’s increasingly competitive marketplace underscores the reality that creating a diverse workplace has never been more important. It’s equally important to make diversity and inclusion an integral part of the organization’s culture. “A sustainable diversity and inclusion strategy must play a central role in decision making at the highest leadership level and filter down to every level of the company.”68 How do organizational leaders do that? One of the first things to do is make sure that diversity and inclusion are part of the organization’s purpose, goals, and strategies. Even during economically challenging times, an organization needs a strong commitment to diversity and inclusion programs. Diversity needs to be integrated into every aspect of the business—from the workforce, customers, and suppliers to products, services, and the communities served. Policies and procedures must be in place to ensure that grievances and concerns are addressed immediately. Finally, the organizational culture needs to be one where diversity and inclusion are valued, even to the point where, like Marriott International, individual performance is measured and rewarded on diversity accomplishments. Mentoring One of the consequences of having few women and minorities in top corporate leadership positions is that lower-level diverse employees lack someone to turn to for support or advice. That’s where a mentoring program can be beneficial. Mentoring is a process whereby an experienced organizational member (a mentor) provides advice and guidance to a less-experienced member (a protégé). Mentors usually provide two unique forms of mentoring functions—career development and social support.69 Andrea Jung, CEO of Avon Products, the first woman to hold that job in the female-oriented products company, said that her male mentor (previous CEO James Preston) had the most influence on her career.70 A study by Catalyst of male mentors to women found that men who impeded or who were indifferent to the progress of women viewed the workplace as a zero-sum game where promotion of women came at the expense of men. However, one thing that stood out among males who championed women was a strong sense of fairness.71 A good mentoring program would be aimed at all diverse employees with high potential to move up the organization’s career ladder. Exhibit 4-9 looks at what a good mentor does. If an organization is serious about its commitment to diversity, it needs to have a mentoring program in place. EXHIBIT 4-9 What a Good Mentor Does • • • • • • • • Provides instruction Offers advice Gives constructive criticism Helps build appropriate skills Shares technical expertise Develops a high-quality, close, and supportive relationship with protégé Keeps lines of communication open Knows when to “let go” and let the protégé prove what he/she can do Sources: J. Prime and C. A. Moss-Racusin, “Engaging Men in Gender Initiatives: What Change Agents Need to Know,” Catalyst [www.catalyst.org], 2009; T. J. DeLong, J. J. Gabarro, and R. J. Lees, “Why Mentoring Matters in a Hypercompetitive World,” Harvard Business Review, January 2008, pp. 115–121; S. N. Mehta, “Why Mentoring Works,” Fortune, July 9, 2001, p. 119; and D. A. Thomas, “Race Matters: The Truth About Mentoring Minorities,” Harvard Business Review, April 2001, pp. 99–107. CHAPTER 4 | MANAGING DIVERSITY 115 Diversity Skills Training “The only thing in human DNA is to discriminate. It’s a part of normal human tribal behavior.”72 In a chapter on managing diversity, you might be surprised to find a statement like this. However, the reality is . . . it’s reality. Our human nature is to not accept or approach anything that’s different from us. But it doesn’t make discrimination of any type or form acceptable. And we live and work in a multicultural context. So the challenge for organizations is to find ways for employees to be effective in dealing with others who aren’t like them. That’s where diversity skills training, specialized training to educate employees about the importance of diversity and teach them skills for working in a diverse workplace, comes in. It’s estimated that some $80 billion has been spent over the last 10 years on diversity programs, much of it spent on training.73 Most diversity skills training programs start with diversity awareness training. During this type of training, employees are made aware of the assumptions and biases they may have. Once we recognize that, we can look at increasing our sensitivity and openness to those who are different from us. Sounds simple, but it’s not. But if people can be taught to recognize that they’re prejudging people and to consciously address that behavior, then the diversity awareness training has been successful. Then, the next step is diversity skills training, in which people learn specific skills on how to communicate and work effectively in a diverse work environment. At Sodexho, the food services/ facilities management company, employee diversity training is an important part of their diversity management program. The company’s chief diversity officer said, “As an organization, we have worked to implement the right policies, but more importantly, empower all our employees to understand issues of diversity and work to ensure change happens at every level of our company.”74 Employee Resource Groups Kellogg Company, the cereal company, is a pioneer in workplace diversity. More than 100 years ago, the company’s founder, W. K. Kellogg, employed women in the workplace and reached across cultural boundaries. That commitment to diversity continues today. The company’s CEO says, “There’s no doubt that our success comes from the many different backgrounds, experiences, ideas, and viewpoints that our people contribute to our business.”75 Kellogg’s has been very supportive of its various employee resource groups, made up of employees connected by some common dimension of diversity. Such groups typically are formed by the employees themselves, not the organizations. However, it’s important for organizations to recognize and support these groups. Employee resource groups (also called employee networks or affinity groups) have become quite popular over the last 10 years.76 Why are they so popular? The main reason is that diverse groups have the opportunity to see that their existence is acknowledged and that they have the support of people within and outside the group. Individuals in a minority often feel that they’re invisible and not important in the overall organizational scheme of things. Employee resource groups provide an opportunity for those individuals to have a voice. For instance, at Kellogg, there’s a WOK (Women of Kellogg) group, a KAARG (Kellogg African American Resource Group), !HOLA! (Kellogg’s Latino Employee Resource Group), K-MERG (Kellogg Multinational Employee Resource Group), and YP (Kellogg Young Professionals Employee Resource Group). The description for WOK says, These men and women employed at IBM have the opportunity to participate in employee resource groups for eight constituencies: women, blacks, Hispanics, Asians, Native Americans, people with disabilities, GLBT (gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender) and men, as well as another group that focuses on work–life balance. IBM has more than 200 network groups within this framework, 42 of which are women’s groups. The company supports these groups of employees who come together voluntarily to help IBM be a better place to work and to help each other become more effective by improving their professional and technical skills. mentoring diversity skills training employee resource groups A process whereby an experienced organizational member (a mentor) provides advice and guidance to a less-experienced member (a protégé) Specialized training to educate employees about the importance of diversity and teach them skills for working in a diverse workplace Groups made up of employees connected by some common dimension of diversity 116 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES “This community of employees is dedicated to the personal and professional growth and development of the women within Kellogg Company. They work together to project a common voice for the shared experiences, perceptions, and needs of women in the Kellogg workplace and to help members reach their full potential.” The statements about the other groups are similar in describing the commitment to empowering, leveraging, and fostering the development of the individual members of the resource group. Through these employee resource groups, those in a minority find that they’re not alone. And that can be a powerful means of embracing and including all employees, regardless of their differences. Do? What Would You Let’s Get Real: My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma, page 98 Kim Scartelli Multiple Franchise Owner and Consultant Curves for Women Canton, MI I think it is admirable for the Deutsche Telekom Company to recognize the need for more women in management positions in their company. However, the idea of a quota troubles me. Quotas could backfire and have the negative effect of lowering morale in a company. In this case, for instance, women who are promoted might feel as though they were selected for their gender versus their individual merit, performance, or abilities. Men, on the other hand, might resent being passed over for promotion to meet the arbitrary quota and may leave a company because they feel as if they can never get ahead with the company policies and quota in place. Deutsche Telekom can keep their goal of increasing women in management but instead of implementing a quota could: • Research and understand the root causes of the gender gap. • Provide gender awareness education for all leaders in the company. • Begin removing the barriers that keep women from reaching these positions. PREPARING FOR: Exam/Quizzes CHAPTER SUMMARY by Learning Outcomes Define workplace diversity and explain why managing it is so important. LEARNING OUTCOME 4.1 LEARNING OUTCOME 4.2 LEARNING OUTCOME 4.3 LEARNING OUTCOME 4.4 LEARNING OUTCOME 4.5 Workplace diversity is the ways in which people in an organization are different from and similar to one another. Managing workforce diversity is important for three reasons: (1) people management benefits—better use of employee talent, increased quality of team problem-solving efforts, and ability to attract and retain diverse employees; (2) organizational performance benefits—reduced costs, enhanced problem-solving ability, and improved system flexibility; and (3) strategic benefits—increased understanding of diverse marketplace, potential to improve sales and market share, competitive advantage because of improved innovation efforts, and viewed as moral and ethical. Describe the changing workplaces in the United States and around the world. The main changes in the workplace in the United States include the total increase in the population, the changing components of the population especially in relation to racial/ ethnic groups, and an aging population. The most important changes in the global population include the total world population and the aging of that population. Explain the different types of diversity found in workplaces. The different types of diversity found in workplaces include age (older workers and younger workers), gender (male and female), race and ethnicity (racial and ethnic classifications), disability/abilities (people with a disability that limits major life activities), religion (religious beliefs and religious practices), sexual orientation and gender identity (gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender) and other (for instance, socioeconomic background, team members from different functional areas, physical attractiveness, obesity, job seniority, and so forth). Discuss the challenges managers face in managing diversity. The two main challenges managers face are personal bias and the glass ceiling. Bias is a tendency or preference toward a particular perspective or ideology. Our biases can lead to prejudice, which is a preconceived belief, opinion, or judgment toward a person or a group of people; stereotyping, which is judging a person on the basis of one’s perception of a group to which he or she belongs; and discrimination, which is when someone acts out their prejudicial attitudes toward people who are the targets of their prejudice. The glass ceiling refers to the invisible barrier that separates women and minorities from top management positions. Describe various workplace diversity management initiatives. It’s important to understand the role of federal laws in diversity. Some of these laws include Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and Age Discrimination in Employment Act. Workplace diversity management initiatives include top management commitment to diversity; mentoring, which is a process whereby an experienced organizational member provides advice and guidance to a less-experienced member; diversity skills training; and employee resource groups, which are groups made up of employees connected by some common dimension of diversity. 4.1 4.5 117 118 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES REVIEW AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. What is workforce diversity and why is managing it so important? 2. Why is it important for an organization to have a clear definition of diversity? 3. Distinguish between surface-level diversity and deeplevel diversity. Why is it important to understand the difference between the two? 4. What are the major trends in the changing populations of the United States and the world? 5. Describe the issues associated with each of the types of workforce diversity. 6. Distinguish between race and ethnicity. 7. What challenges do managers face in creating accommodating and safe work environments for employees? 8. Explain the relationship between bias, prejudice, stereotyping, and discrimination. 9. What U.S. federal laws are important to workplace diversity initiatives? 10. Why do you think the glass ceiling has proven to be a barrier to women and minorities? ETHICS DILEMMA “Even if the idea was a good one and truly was promoting Black cultural heritage, it really does come off as manipulation and stereotyping.” Check out both websites. What do you think? Do you think these targeted sites are manipulative and stereotypical? Why or why not? Is there anything else the company could or should be doing? In August of 2009, a viral campaign against McDonald’s website, 365black.com, began to spread.77 Anger over the website grew as news commentators discovered an additional McDonald’s website targeting the Asian community, called MyInspirAsian.com. One individual said, SKILLS EXERCISE Developing Your Valuing Diversity Skill About the Skill Understanding and managing people who are similar to us are challenges—but understanding and managing people who are dissimilar from us and from each other can be even tougher.78 The diversity issues an individual manager might face are many. They may include issues such as communicating with employees whose familiarity with the language may be limited; creating career development programs that fit the skills, needs, and values of a particular group; helping a diverse team cope with a conflict over goals or work assignments; or learning which rewards are valued by different groups. Steps in Practicing the Skill 1. Fully accept diversity. Successfully valuing diversity starts with each individual accepting the principle of diversity. Accept the value of diversity for its own sake— not simply because it’s the right thing to do. And it’s important that you reflect your acceptance in all you say and do. 2. Recruit broadly. When you have job openings, work to get a diverse applicant pool. Although referrals from current employees can be a good source of applicants, that source tends to produce candidates similar to the present workforce. 3. Select fairly. Make sure that the selection process doesn’t discriminate. One suggestion is to use job-specific tests rather than general aptitude or knowledge tests. Such tests measure specific skills, not subjective characteristics. 4. Provide orientation and training for diverse employees. Making the transition from outsider to insider can be particularly difficult for a diverse employee. Provide support either through a group or through a mentoring arrangement. 5. Sensitize nondiverse employees. Not only do you personally need to accept and value diversity, as a manager you need to encourage all your employees to do so. Many organizations do this through diversity training programs. In addition, employees can also be part of ongoing discussion groups whose members meet monthly to discuss stereotypes and ways of improving diversity relationships. The most important thing a manager can do is show by his or her actions that diversity is valued. CHAPTER 4 | MANAGING DIVERSITY 6. Strive to be flexible. Part of valuing diversity is recognizing that different groups have different needs and values. Be flexible in accommodating employee requests. 7. Seek to motivate individually. Motivating employees is an important skill for any manager; motivating a diverse workforce has its own special challenges. Managers must strive to be in tune with the background, cultures, and values of employees. 8. Reinforce employee differences. Encourage individuals to embrace and value diverse views. Create traditions and ceremonies that promote diversity. Celebrate diversity by accentuating its positive aspects. However, also be prepared to deal with the challenges of diversity such as mistrust, miscommunication, lack of cohesiveness, attitudinal differences, and stress. Practicing the Skill Read through the following scenario. Write down some notes about how you would handle the situation described. Be sure to refer to the eight behaviors described for valuing diversity. Scenario Read through the descriptions of the following employees who work for the same organization. After reading each WORKING TOGETHER Team Exercise The popularity of employee resource groups continues to climb. Form small groups with three or four other class members. Your task is to research how to form employee resource groups for staff members at your school. Come up description, write a short paragraph describing what you think the goals and priorities of each employee might be. With what types of employee issues might the manager of each employee have to deal? How could these managers show that they value the diversity represented by each? Lester. Lester is 57 years old, a college graduate, and a vice president of the firm. His two children are married and he is a grandparent of three beautiful grandchildren. He lives in a condo with his wife who does volunteer work and is active in their church. Lester is healthy and likes to stay active, both physically and mentally. Sanjyot. Sanjyot is a 30-year-old clerical worker who came to the United States from Indonesia 10 years ago. She completed high school after moving to the United States and has begun to attend evening classes at a local community college. Sanjyot is a single parent with two children under the age of 8. Although her health is excellent, one of her children suffers from a severe learning disability. Yuri. Yuri is a recent immigrant from one of the former Soviet republics. He is 42 years old and his English communication skills are quite limited. He has an engineering degree from his country but since he’s not licensed to practice in the United States, he works as a parts clerk. He is unmarried and has no children but feels obligated to send much of his paycheck to relatives back in his home country. with a written plan that discusses the benefits and challenges of employee resource groups, the steps to follow in creating these groups, and suggestions for maintaining the value of such groups for their members. Be prepared to turn in your written report to your professor or to present it in class. MY TURN TO BE A MANAGER Describe your experiences with people from other backgrounds. What challenges have you faced? What have you learned that will help you in understanding the unique needs and challenges of a diverse workplace? Go to DiversityInc.com [www.diversityinc.com] and find the latest list of Top 50 Companies for Diversity. Select three companies from this list. Describe and evaluate what they’re doing as far as workplace diversity. Think of times when you may have been treated unfairly because of stereotypical thinking. What stereotypes were being used? How did you respond to the treatment? Go to the website of Catalyst [www.catalyst.org] and find the Research & Knowledge tab. Click on “Browse Research & Knowledge.” Go through the list and find the research on “Women in Management, Global Comparison.” What surprised you the most about the data shown there? Why? Find two examples of companies that are doing each of the four workplace diversity initiatives. Write a short description of what each is doing. Steve’s and Mary’s suggested readings: C. Harvey and M. J. Allard, Understanding and Managing Diversity, 4th ed. (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2009); S. Thiederman, Making Diversity Work: 7 Steps for Defeating Bias in the Workplace, 2nd ed. (New York: Kaplan Publishing, 2008); A. M. Konrad, P. Prasad, and J. K. Pringle (eds.), Handbook of Workplace Diversity (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 2006); and G. N. Powell, Managing a Diverse Workforce, 2nd ed. (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 2004). 119 120 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES Pick one of the laws listed in Exhibit 4-8. Research that law looking for these elements: Whom does the law cover? What does the law prohibit? What are the consequences for violating the law? In your own words, write down three things you learned in this chapter about being a good manager. Self-knowledge can be a powerful learning tool. Go to mymanagementlab.com and complete any of these self-assessment exercises: What Are My Attitudes Toward Workplace Diversity? Am I Well-Suited for a Career as a Global Manager? What’s My Attitude Toward Older People? and What Are My Gender Role Perceptions? Using the results of your assessments, identify personal strengths and weaknesses. What will you do to reinforce your strengths and improve your weaknesses? CASE APPLICATION Mission Possible: Strategic Diversity T he U.S. Navy and the U.S. Naval Academy, the prestigious undergraduate college of the Navy service in Annapolis, Maryland, might not be places that come to mind when you think of organizations that are superior diversity champions.79 Yet the Navy is just that. In fact, the enlisted force of the Navy is more than 40 percent diverse. The Deputy Chief of Naval Operations Vice Admiral says, “We view the diversity imperative as a strategic issue for several reasons.” One reason is the changing demographics of the United States. With nearly 70 percent of new workers entering the workforce in our recruitable demo- Changing demographics and the adoption of a strategy that prevents as well as wins wars have brought more ethnic and gender diversity to the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Naval Academy. graphic being women and minorities, the Navy has to pay attention to diversity. Another compelling reason is that the Navy’s strategic imperative has evolved over time to include preventing wars, not just winning wars. This approach involves engaging in humanitarian assistance, disaster relief, and building strong maritime partners around the world, all of which benefit from a diverse naval force. For instance, after the Indonesian tsunami in late December 2004, a Navy hospital ship was relocated to that region. During that event, the public opinion of the United States changed in a few short months from 70 percent not liking to 70 percent supporting. Since that time, the hospital ship has been to South America and other places. “We see America’s Navy as a force for good around the globe.” At the Naval Academy, where the military branch’s future leaders are educated, applications have increased 57 percent among Black, Latino, and other traditionally underrepresented applicants. The Naval Academy Superintendent Vice Admiral says that, although there’s no specific numerical diversity goal, it makes sense to have representation close to the demographics of the country. The faculty/staff at the Naval Academy have seen changes with the new generation of “millennial” midshipmen (the “students” at the Naval Academy) and have adjusted their methods and approaches to accommodate those changes. “How we reach out to them is different. We just have to be smart enough to understand that.” CHAPTER 4 | MANAGING DIVERSITY Discussion Questions 1. How are population trends affecting the U.S. Navy’s education and operations? What might the organization have to do to adapt to these trends beyond what they’re already doing? 2. What challenges might the Navy face in adapting to a more diverse student body at the Naval Academy? 3. Just like the dilemma that businesses face in retaining diverse employees, the Navy has to ensure that once its workforce is trained that those individuals stay with the organization. What can the Navy do to assure this? 4. Would mentoring or employee resource groups be appropriate for a military organization? Explain. How might a mentoring program or employee resource groups be implemented in the Navy? CASE APPLICATION Women in Management at Deutsche Telekom: Part 2 ontinuing the story from our chapter-opening Manager’s Dilemma, what is Deutsche Telekom doing C to achieve its goal of bringing more women into management positions? One action the company is taking is to increase and improve recruiting of female university graduates. In fact, the company has committed to having at least 30 percent of the places in executive development programs held by women. Other steps being taken by the company revolve around the work environment and work–family issues. The company plans to expand its parental-leave programs and introduce more flexible working hours for managers. Right now, fewer than 1 percent of the company’s managers work part time. In addition, the company plans to double the number of available places in company child-care programs. Discussion Questions 1. What do you think of this “quota” approach that Deutsche Telekom is pursuing? What benefits and drawbacks does such an approach have? 2. What issues might Deutsche Telekom face in recruiting female university graduates? How could they address these issues? 3. What issues might the company face in introducing changes in work–family programs? Again, how could they address these issues? 4. What workplace diversity initiatives discussed in the chapter might be appropriate for Deutsche Telekom? What would be involved in implementing these initiatives? 121 Meet the Manager John Emerman Owner The Stone Oven Bakery & Café Cleveland, OH MY JOB: I am the owner/manager and founder of The Stone Oven Bakery & Café. I’m involved in every aspect of the business including bookkeeping, marketing/advertising, menu design, hiring/firing, scheduling employees, maintaining and repairing equipment and the furnishings in the store, and serving customers when necessary. BEST PART OF MY JOB: The creative aspects. I designed the interior of my store, decided what items to serve, laid out equipment, and so on. Because I wear every hat imaginable, I never get bored. I have an endless list of projects to work on. For example, last month I purchased a new cash register system that I had to program. It was a great learning experience and a creative process—choosing key colors and placement for optimal efficiency. The other thing I love about the business is the pace. When we have a line to the door at lunchtime I’m a master at weaving quickly through the crowd to bus tables, restock napkins, and expediting orders. It’s a real rush. Discuss what it means to be socially responsible and what factors influence that decision. page 124 Explain green management and how organizations can go green. page 127 Discuss the factors that lead to ethical and unethical behavior. page 129 Describe management’s role in encouraging ethical behavior. page 135 Discuss current social responsibility and ethics issues. page 139 WORST PART OF MY JOB: Owning a business that operates 360 days per year means you are “on-call” every day. Although I only work a couple of hours each weekend day, I may get a call at any hour of the day or night with a problem that needs my immediate attention (one of the delivery vans broke down, the credit card machines stopped working, the walk-in cooler is at 50 degrees, and so on). I always carry the work schedule on my person in case someone doesn’t show up and I need to find a replacement. Because restaurant workers are typically paid less than in other businesses, turnover can be high. It is a continuing effort to find and try to keep workers who have the right combination of brains, personality (sense of humor), and work ethic. BEST MANAGEMENT ADVICE EVER RECEIVED: “Don’t go into the restaurant business—it’s the hardest.” I didn’t listen. 123 A Manager’s Dilemma It’s an incredibly simple but poten- experience that he wanted to do something. That tially world-changing idea.1 For something is what TOMS does now by blending each pair of shoes sold, a pair is do- charity with commerce. (The name TOMS is actu- nated to a child in need. That’s the ally short for a “better tomorrow.”) And a better to- business model followed by TOMS morrow is what Blake wanted to provide to Shoes. During a visit to Argentina in shoeless children around the world. 2006 as a contestant on the CBS re- Those shoe donations have been central to the ality show The Amazing Race, Blake success of the TOMS brand, which is popular Mycoskie, founder of TOMS,“saw lots among tweens, teens, and twenty-somethings. And of kids with no shoes who were suf- 400,000 pairs of shoes had been donated as of fering from injuries to their feet.” Just early 2010. Put yourself in Blake’s position. How can think what it would be like to be he balance being socially responsible and being barefoot, not by choice, but from focused on profits? lack of availability and ability to own a pair. He was so moved by the What Would You Do? Deciding how socially responsible an organization needs to be is just one example of the complicated types of ethical and social responsibility issues that managers, such as Blake Mycoskie, may have to cope with as they plan, organize, lead, and control. As managers manage, these issues can and do influence their actions. 5.1 LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss what it means to be socially responsible and what factors influence that decision. What Is Social Responsibility? By using digital technology and file-sharing Web sites, music and video users all over the world often obtain and share many of their favorite recordings for free. Large global corporations lower their costs by outsourcing to countries where human rights are not a high priority and justify it by saying they’re bringing in jobs and helping strengthen the local economies. Businesses facing a drastically changed economic environment offer employees reduced hours and early retirement packages. Are these companies being socially responsible? Managers regularly face decisions that have a dimension of social responsibility in areas such as employee relations, philanthropy, pricing, resource conservation, product quality and safety, and doing business in countries that devalue human rights. What does it mean to be socially responsible? From Obligations to Responsiveness to Responsibility The concept of social responsibility has been described in different ways. For instance, it’s been called “profit making only,” “going beyond profit making,” “any discretionary corporate activity intended to further social welfare,” and “improving social or environmental conditions.”2 We can understand it better if we first compare it to two similar concepts: social obligation and social responsiveness.3 Social obligation is when a firm engages in social actions because of its obligation to meet certain economic and legal responsibilities. The organization does what it’s obligated to do and nothing more. This idea reflects the classical view of social responsibility, which says that management’s only social responsibility is to maximize profits. The most outspoken advocate of this approach is economist and Nobel laureate Milton Friedman. He argued that managers’ primary responsibility is to operate the business in the best interests of the stockholders, whose primary concerns are financial.4 He also argued that when managers decide to spend the organization’s resources for “social good,” they add to the costs of doing business, which have to be passed on to consumers through higher prices or absorbed by stockholders through smaller dividends. You need to understand that Friedman doesn’t say that organizations shouldn’t be socially responsible. But his interpretation of social responsibility is to maximize profits for stockholders. 124 CHAPTER 5 | MANAGING SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS 125 The other two concepts—social responsiveness and social responsibility—reflect the socioeconomic view, which says that managers’ social responsibilities go beyond mak- ing profits to include protecting and improving society’s welfare. This view is based on the belief that corporations are not independent entities responsible only to stockholders, but have an obligation to the larger society. Organizations around the world have embraced this view as shown by a survey of global executives in which 84 percent said that companies must balance obligations to shareholders with obligations to the public good.5 But how do these two concepts differ? Social responsiveness is when a company engages in social actions in response to some popular social need. Managers are guided by social norms and values and make practical, market-oriented decisions about their actions.6 For instance, Ford Motor Company became the first automaker to endorse a federal ban on sending text messages while driving. A company spokesperson said that, “The most complete and most recent research shows that activity that draws drivers’ eyes away from the road for an extended period while driving, such as text messaging, substantially increases the risk of accidents.”7 By supporting this ban, company managers “responded” to what they felt was an important social need. When the disastrous earthquake hit Haiti in January 2010, many companies responded to the immense needs in that region. For instance, UPS has a company-wide policy that urges employees to volunteer during natural disasters and other crises. In support of this policy, UPS maintains a 20-person Logistics Emergency Team in Asia, Europe, and the Americas that’s trained in humanitarian relief.8 A socially responsible organization views things differently. It goes beyond what it’s obligated to do or chooses to do because of some popular social need and does what it can to help improve society because it’s the right thing to do. We define social responsibility as a business’s intention, beyond its legal and economic obligations, to do the right things and act in ways that are good for society.9 Our definition assumes that a business obeys the law and cares for its stockholders, but adds an ethical imperative to do those things that make society better and not to do those that make it worse. A socially responsible organization does what is right because it feels it has an ethical responsibility to do so. For example, Abt Electronics in Glenview, Illinois, would be described as socially responsible according to our definition. As one of the largest single-store electronics retailers in the United States, it responded to soaring energy costs and environmental concerns by shutting off lights more frequently and reducing air conditioning and heating. However, an Abt family member said, “These actions weren’t just about costs, but about doing the right thing. We don’t do everything just because of money.”10 So, how should we view an organization’s social actions? A U.S. business that meets federal pollution control standards or that doesn’t discriminate against employees over the age of 40 in job promotion decisions is meeting its social obligation because laws mandate these actions. However, when it provides on-site child-care facilities for employees or packages products using recycled paper, it’s being socially responsive. Why? Working parents and environmentalists have voiced these social concerns and demanded such actions. For many businesses, their social actions are better viewed as being socially responsive than socially responsible (at least according to our definition). However, such actions are still good for society. For example, Walmart sponsored a program to address a serious social problem—hunger. Customers donated money to America’s Second Harvest by purchasing puzzle pieces and Walmart matched the first $5 million raised. As part of this program, the company ran advertisements in major newspapers showing the word H_NGER and the tag line, “The problem can’t be solved without You.”11 social obligation socioeconomic view social responsibility When a firm engages in social actions because of its obligation to meet certain economic and legal responsibilities The view that management’s social responsibility goes beyond making profits to include protecting and improving society’s welfare A business’s intention, beyond its legal and economic obligations, to do the right things and act in ways that are good for society classical view social responsiveness The view that management’s only social responsibility is to maximize profits When a firm engages in social actions in response to some popular social need 126 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES Should Organizations Be Socially Involved? Being socially responsible means understanding how my business fits in to the local and global community and realizing how my choices affect these communities. EXHIBIT 5-1 Arguments For and Against Social Responsibility Other than meeting their social obligations (which they must do), should organizations be socially involved? One way to look at this question is by examining arguments for and against social involvement. Several points are outlined in Exhibit 5-1.12 Numerous studies have examined whether social involvement affects a company’s economic performance.13 Although most found a small positive relationship, no generalizable conclusions can be made because these studies have shown that relationship is affected by various contextual factors such as firm size, industry, economic conditions, and regulatory environment.14 Another concern was causation. If a study showed that social involvement and economic performance were positively related, this correlation didn’t necessarily mean that social involvement caused higher economic performance. It could simply mean that high profits afforded companies the “luxury” of being socially involved.15 Such methodological concerns can’t be taken lightly. In fact, one study found that if the flawed empirical analyses in these studies were “corrected,” social responsibility had a neutral impact on a company’s financial performance.16 Another found that participating in social issues not related to the organization’s primary stakeholders was negatively associated with shareholder value.17 A re-analysis of several studies concluded that managers can afford to be (and should be) socially responsible.18 For Against Public expectations Public opinion now supports businesses pursuing economic and social goals. Violation of profit maximization Business is being socially responsible only when it pursues its economic interests. Long-run profits Socially responsible companies tend to have more secure long-run profits. Dilution of purpose Pursuing social goals dilutes business’s primary purpose—economic productivity. Ethical obligation Businesses should be socially responsible because responsible actions are the right thing to do. Costs Many socially responsible actions do not cover their costs and someone must pay those costs. Public image Businesses can create a favorable public image by pursuing social goals. Too much power Businesses have a lot of power already and if they pursue social goals they will have even more. Better environment Business involvement can help solve difficult social problems. Lack of skills Business leaders lack the necessary skills to address social issues. Discouragement of further governmental regulation By becoming socially responsible, businesses can expect less government regulation. Lack of accountability There are no direct lines of accountability for social actions. Balance of responsibility and power Businesses have a lot of power and an equally large amount of responsibility is needed to balance against that power. Stockholder interests Social responsibility will improve a business’s stock price in the long run. Possession of resources Businesses have the resources to support public and charitable projects that need assistance. Superiority of prevention over cures Businesses should address social problems before they become serious and costly to correct. CHAPTER 5 | MANAGING SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS 127 Another way to view social involvement and economic performance is by looking at socially responsible investing (SRI) funds, which provide a way for individual investors to support socially responsible companies. (You can find a list of SRI funds at [www.socialfunds.com].) Typically, these funds use some type of social screening; that is, they apply social and environmental criteria to investment decisions. For instance, SRI funds usually will not invest in companies that are involved in liquor, gambling, tobacco, nuclear power, weapons, price fixing, fraud, or in companies that have poor product safety, employee relations, and environmental track records. The number of socially screened mutual funds has grown from 55 to 260 and assets in these funds have grown to more than $2.7 trillion—about 11 percent of total assets in managed funds in the United States.19 But more important than the total amount invested in these funds is that the Social Investment Forum reports that the performance of most SRI funds is comparable to that of non-SRI funds.20 So, what can we conclude about social involvement and economic performance? It appears that a company’s social actions don’t hurt its economic performance. Given political and societal pressures to be socially involved, managers probably need to take social issues and goals into consideration as they plan, organize, lead, and control. Green Management and Sustainability Coca-Cola, the world’s largest soft drink company, announced that 100 percent of its new vending machines and coolers would be hydrofluorocarbon-free (HFC-free) by 2015. This initiative alone would have the same effect on global carbon emissions as taking 11 million cars off the road for a single year.21 The Fairmont Hotel chain has generated a lot of buzz over its decision to set up rooftop beehives to try and help strengthen the population of honeybees, which have been mysteriously abandoning their hives and dying off by the millions worldwide. This Colony Collapse Disorder could have potentially disastrous consequences since one-third of the food we eat comes from plants that depend on bee pollination. At Toronto’s Fairmont Royal York, six hives are home to some 360,000 bees that forage in and around the city and produce a supply of award-winning honey.22 In 2004, top executives at General Electric Company voted against CEO Jeffrey Immelt’s plan for a green business initiative. However, Immelt refused to take “no” for an answer and today that initiative, called Ecomagination, is one of the most widely recognized corporate green programs. It led to $100 million in cost savings and reduced the company’s greenhouse emissions by 30 percent. And the program fostered the development of 80 new products and services that generate some $17 billion in annual revenue. Immelt said, “Going green has been 10 times better than I ever imagined.”23 Being green is in! Until the late 1960s, few people (and organizations) paid attention to the environmental consequences of their decisions and actions. Although some groups were concerned with conserving natural resources, about the only reference to saving the environment was the ubiquitous printed request “Please Don’t Litter.” However, a number of environmental disasters brought a new spirit of environmentalism to individuals, groups, and organizations. Increasingly, managers have begun to consider the impact of their organization on the natural environment, which we call green management. What do managers need to know about going green? How Organizations Go Green Managers and organizations can do many things to protect and preserve the natural environment.24 Some do no more than what is required by law—that is, they fulfill their social obligation. However, others have radically changed their products and production processes. For instance, Fiji Water is using renewable energy sources, preserving forests, social screening green management Applying social criteria (screens) to investment decisions Managers consider the impact of their organization on the natural environment 5.2 LEARNING OUTCOME Explain green management and how organizations can go green. 128 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES and conserving water. Carpet-maker Mohawk Industries uses recycled plastic containers to produce fiber used in its carblacksmith who, in 1957, started pets. Google and Intel initiated an effort to get computer crafting mountain climbing pitons makers and customers to adopt technologies that reduce enused by himself and other climbergy consumption. Paris-based TOTAL, SA, one of the ing enthusiasts as anchors on risky world’s largest integrated oil companies, is going green by 26 implementing tough new rules on oil tanker safety and workclimbs. His hardware became so ing with groups such as Global Witness and Greenpeace. popular that he would go on to UPS, the world’s largest package delivery company, has done found the outdoor-clothing comseveral things—from retrofitting its aircraft with advanced pany Patagonia. As his company technology and fuel-efficient engines to developing a computer network that efficiently dispatches its fleet of brown grew, Chouinard realized that trucks to using alternative fuel to run those trucks. Although everything his company did had an interesting, these examples don’t tell us much about how oreffect—mostly negative—on the environment. Today, he defines the company’s ganizations go green. One model uses the terms shades of mission in eco-driven terms:“To use business to inspire and implement solutions green to describe the different environmental approaches that organizations may take.25 (See Exhibit 5-2.) to the environmental crisis.” Chouinard has put environmental activism at the The first approach, the legal (or light green) approach, forefront of his company. Since 1985, Patagonia has donated 1 percent of its is simply doing what is required legally. In this approach, annual sales to grassroots environmental groups and has gotten more than which illustrates social obligation, organizations exhibit 1,200 companies to follow its lead as part of its “1% for the Planet” group. He little environmental sensitivity. They obey laws, rules, and regulations without legal challenge and that’s the extent of recognizes that “every product, no matter how much thought goes into it, has a their being green. destructive impact on Earth.” But nonetheless, he keeps doing what he does As an organization becomes more sensitive to environbecause “it’s the right thing to do.” mental issues, it may adopt the market approach, and respond to environmental preferences of customers. Whatever customers demand in terms of environmentally friendly products will be what the organization provides. For example, DuPont developed a new type of herbicide that helped farmers around the world reduce their annual use of chemicals by more than 45 million pounds. By developing this product, the company was responding to the demands of its customers (farmers) who wanted to minimize the use of chemicals on their crops. This is a good example of social responsiveness, as is the next approach. In the stakeholder approach, an organization works to meet the environmental demands of multiple stakeholders such as employees, suppliers, or community. For instance, HewlettPackard has several corporate environmental programs in place for its supply chain (suppliers), product design and product recycling (customers and society), and work operations (employees and community). Finally, if an organization pursues an activist (or dark green) approach, it looks for ways to protect the earth’s natural resources. The activist approach reflects the highest degree of environmental sensitivity and illustrates social responsibility. For example, Belgian company Ecover produces ecological cleaning products in a near-zero-emissions factory. This factory (the world’s first ecological one) is an engineering marvel with a huge grass roof that keeps things cool in summer and warm in winter and a water treatment system that runs on wind and solar energy. The company chose to build this facility because of its deep commitment to the environment. Yvon Chouinard is a self-taught EXHIBIT 5-2 Green Approaches Source: Based on R. E. Freeman, J. Pierce, and R. Dodd, Shades of Green: Business Ethics and the Environment (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995). Low Legal Approach (Light Green) Environmental Sensitivity Market Approach Stakeholder Approach High Activist Approach (Dark Green) CHAPTER 5 | MANAGING SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS 129 At New Zealand’s largest wind farm, these wind turbines made by Siemens Windpower generate clean electricity for 100,000 households. One of the most sustainable corporations in the world, Germanybased Siemens pursues an activist approach to the environment from its factories and buildings that consume only small amounts of power to its power plants that generate electricity from the sun. As a good corporate citizen and as a business enterprise, Siemens management and employees are committed to provide products, systems, and technologies that protect the environment, foster human health, and help conserve natural resources. Evaluating Green Management Actions As businesses become “greener,” they often release detailed reports on their environmental performance. More than 1,300 companies around the globe voluntarily report their efforts in promoting environmental sustainability using the guidelines developed by the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI). These reports, which can be found on the GRI Web site [www.globalreporting.org], describe the numerous green actions of these organizations. Another way that organizations show their commitment to being green is through pursuing standards developed by the nongovernmental International Organization for Standardization (ISO). Although ISO has developed more than 18,000 international standards, it’s probably best known for its ISO 9000 (quality management) and ISO 14000 (environmental management) standards. Organizations that want to become ISO 14000 compliant must develop a total management system for meeting environmental challenges. In other words, it must minimize the effects of its activities on the environment and continually improve its environmental performance. If an organization can meet these standards, it can state that it’s ISO 14000 compliant, an accomplishment that organizations in 155 countries have achieved. One final way to evaluate a company’s green actions is to use the Global 100 list of the most sustainable corporations in the world [www.global100.org].27 To be named to this list, which is announced each year at the renowned World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, a company has displayed a superior ability to effectively manage environmental and social factors. In 2010, the United Kingdom led the list with 21 Global 100 companies. The United States followed with 12, and both Australia and Canada had 9 companies on the list. Some companies on the 2010 list included Siemens (Germany), Pearson PLC (U.K.), Westpac Banking Corp. (Australia), Encana Corp. (Canada), and Starbucks (U.S.). Managers and Ethical Behavior One hundred fifty years. That was the maximum prison sentence handed to financier Bernard Madoff, who stole billions of dollars from his clients, by a U.S. district judge who called his crimes “evil.” In Britain, which has been characterized by some critics as a “nanny state because of its purported high level of social control and surveillance,” a controversy is brewing over the monitoring of garbage cans. Many local governments have installed monitoring chips in municipally distributed trash bans. These chips match cans with owners and can be used to track the weight of the bins, leading some critics to fear that the country is moving to a pay-as-you go system, which they believe will discriminate against large families. A government report says that Iceland, hit hard by both the global economic meltdown and a 5.3 LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss the factors that lead to ethical and unethical behavior. 130 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES Being ethical means basing decisions on values that are consistent with my belief system. pesky volcano, was “victimized by politicians, bankers, and regulators who engaged in acts of extreme negligence.”28 When you hear about such behaviors—especially after the highprofile financial misconduct at companies such as Enron, Worldcom, Lehman Brothers, and others—you might conclude that businesses aren’t ethical. Although that’s not the case, managers—at all levels, in all areas, in all sizes, and in all kinds of organizations—do face ethical issues and dilemmas. For instance, is it ethical for a sales representative to bribe a purchasing agent as an inducement to buy? Would it make a difference if the bribe came out of the sales rep’s commission? Is it ethical for someone to use a company car for private use? How about using company e-mail for personal correspondence or using the company phone to make personal phone calls? What if you managed an employee who worked all weekend on an emergency situation and you told him to take off two days sometime later and mark it down as “sick days” because your company had a clear policy that overtime would not be compensated for any reason?29 Would that be okay? How will you handle such situations? As managers plan, organize, lead, and control, they must consider ethical dimensions. What do we mean by ethics? We’re defining it as the principles, values, and beliefs that define right and wrong decisions and behavior.30 Many decisions that managers make require them to consider both the process and who’s affected by the result.31 To better understand the ethical issues involved in such decisions, let’s look at the factors that determine whether a person acts ethically or unethically. Factors That Determine Ethical and Unethical Behavior Whether someone behaves ethically or unethically when faced with an ethical dilemma is influenced by several things: his or her stage of moral development and other moderating variables including individual characteristics, the organization’s structural design, the organization’s culture, and the intensity of the ethical issue. (See Exhibit 5-3.) People who lack a strong moral sense are much less likely to do the wrong things if they’re constrained by rules, policies, job descriptions, or strong cultural norms that disapprove of such behaviors. Conversely, intensely moral individuals can be corrupted by an organizational structure and culture that permits or encourages unethical practices. Let’s look more closely at these factors. STAGE OF MORAL DEVELOPMENT. Research divides moral development into three levels, each having two stages.32 At each successive stage, an individual’s moral judgment becomes less dependent on outside influences and more internalized. At the first level, the preconventional level, a person’s choice between right or wrong is based on personal consequences from outside sources, such as physical punishment, reward, or exchange of favors. At the second level, the conventional level, ethical decisions rely on maintaining expected standards and living up to the expectations of others. At the principled level, individuals define moral values apart from the authority of the groups to which they belong or society in general. The three levels and six stages are described in Exhibit 5-4. EXHIBIT 5-3 Factors that Determine Ethical and Unethical Behavior Individual Characteristics Ethical Dilemma Stage of Moral Development Issue Intensity Moderators Structural Variables Organizational Culture Ethical/Unethical Behavior CHAPTER 5 | MANAGING SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS 131 EXHIBIT 5-4 Level Description of Stage Principled 6. Following self-chosen ethical principles even if they violate the law 5. Valuing rights of others and upholding absolute values and rights regardless of the majority’s opinion Conventional 4. Maintaining conventional order by fulfilling obligations to which you have agreed 3. Living up to what is expected by people close to you Preconventional 2. Following rules only when doing so is in your immediate interest 1. Sticking to rules to avoid physical punishment What can we conclude about moral development?33 First, people proceed through the six stages sequentially. Second, there is no guarantee of continued moral development. Third, the majority of adults are at Stage 4: They’re limited to obeying the rules and will be inclined to behave ethically, although for different reasons. A manager at stage 3 is likely to make decisions based on peer approval; a manager at stage 4 will try to be a “good corporate citizen” by making decisions that respect the organization’s rules and procedures; and a stage 5 manager is likely to challenge organizational practices that he or she believes to be wrong. INDIVIDUAL CHARACTERISTICS. Two individual characteristics—values and personality— play a role in determining whether a person behaves ethically. Each person comes to an organization with a relatively entrenched set of personal values, which represent basic convictions about what is right and wrong. Our values develop from a young age based on what we see and hear from parents, teachers, friends, and others. Thus, employees in the same organization often possess very different values.34 Although values and stage of moral development may seem similar, they’re not. Values are broad and cover a wide range of issues; the stage of moral development is a measure of independence from outside influences. Two personality variables have been found to influence an individual’s actions according to his or her beliefs about what is right or wrong: ego strength and locus of control. Ego strength measures the strength of a person’s convictions. People with high ego strength are likely to resist impulses to act unethically and instead follow their convictions. That is, individuals high in ego strength are more likely to do what they think is right and be more consistent in their moral judgments and actions than those with low ego strength. Locus of control is the degree to which people believe they control their own fate. People with an internal locus of control believe they control their own destinies. They’re more likely to take responsibility for consequences and rely on their own internal standards of right and wrong to guide their behavior. They’re also more likely to be consistent in their moral judgments and actions. People with an external locus believe what happens to them is due to luck or chance. They’re less likely to take personal responsibility for the consequences of their behavior and more likely to rely on external forces.35 STRUCTURAL VARIABLES. An organization’s structural design can influence whether employees behave ethically. Those structures that minimize ambiguity and uncertainty with ethics ego strength Principles, values, and beliefs that define what is right and wrong behavior A personality measure of the strength of a person’s convictions values locus of control Basic convictions about what is right and wrong A personality attribute that measures the degree to which people believe they control their own fate Stages of Moral Development Source: Based on L. Kohlberg, “Moral Stages and Moralization: The CognitiveDevelopment Approach,” in T. Lickona (ed.), Moral Development and Behavior: Theory, Research, and Social Issues (New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1976), pp. 34–35. 132 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES by the numbers 39 52 percent of people said they would lounge around the house if they took a sick day when they weren’t really sick. 75 percent of employers said that when assessing applicants, they look for the ability to connect choice and actions to ethical decisions. 68 percent of companies said their focus on green initiatives was not going to change during 2010. 53 8 90 percent of employees don’t think their boss is honest. 46 percent of Gen Y’ers said they would forgo higher pay or a promotion to work for an organization with a good reputation. percent of employees feel pressured to commit an ethics violation at work. percent of job applicants said they would gravitate toward a company perceived to be ethically and socially responsible. My company’s values include supporting local nonprofit organizations and groups by donating leftover food and gift certificates. formal rules and regulations and those that continuously remind employees of what is ethical are more likely to encourage ethical behavior. Other structural variables that influence ethical choices include goals, performance appraisal systems, and reward allocation procedures. Although many organizations use goals to guide and motivate employees, those goals can create some unexpected problems. One study found that people who don’t reach set goals are more likely to engage in unethical behavior, even if they do or don’t have economic incentives to do so. The researchers concluded that “goal setting can lead to unethical behavior.”36 Examples of such behaviors abound—from companies shipping unfinished products just to reach sales goals or “managing earnings” to meet financial analysts’ expectations, to schools excluding certain groups of students when reporting standardized test scores to make their “pass” rate look better.37 An organization’s performance appraisal system also can influence ethical behavior. Some systems focus exclusively on outcomes, while others evaluate means as well as ends. When employees are evaluated only on outcomes, they may be pressured to do whatever is necessary to look good on the outcomes, and not be concerned with how they got those results. Research suggests that “success may serve to excuse unethical behaviors.”38 The danger of such thinking is that if managers are more lenient in correcting unethical behaviors of successful employees, other employees will model their behavior on what they see. Closely related to the organization’s appraisal system is how rewards are allocated. The more that rewards or punishment depend on specific goal outcomes, the more employees are pressured to do whatever they must to reach those goals, perhaps to the point of compromising their ethical standards. ORGANIZATION’S CULTURE. As Exhibit 5-3 showed, the content and strength of an organization’s culture also influence ethical behavior.40 We learned in Chapter 2 that an organization’s culture consists of the shared organizational values. These values reflect what the organization stands for and what it believes in as well as create an environment that influences employee behavior ethically or unethically. When it comes to ethical behavior, a culture most likely to encourage high ethical standards is one that’s high in risk tolerance, control, and conflict tolerance. Employees in such a culture are encouraged to be aggressive and innovative, are aware that unethical practices will be discovered, and feel free to openly challenge expectations they consider to be unrealistic or personally undesirable. Because shared values can be powerful influences, many organizations are using values-based management, in which the organization’s values guide employees in the way they do their jobs. For instance, Timberland is an example of a company using valuesbased management. With a simple statement, “Make It Better,” employees at Timberland know what’s expected and valued; that is, find ways to “make it better”—whether it’s creating quality products for customers, performing community service activities, designing employee training programs, or figuring out ways to make the company’s packaging more environmentally friendly. As CEO Jeffrey Swartz says on the company’s Web site, “Everything we do at Timberland grows out of our relentless pursuit to find a way to make it better.” At Corning, one of the core values guiding employee behavior is integrity. Employees are expected to work in ways that are honest, decent, and fair. Timberland and Corning aren’t alone in their use of values-based management. A survey of global companies found that a large number (more than 89%) said they had a written corporate values statement.41 This survey also found that most of the companies believed that their values influenced relationships and reputation, the top-performing companies consciously connected values with the way employees did their work, and top managers were important to reinforcing the importance of the values throughout the organization. Thus, an organization’s managers do play an important role here. They’re responsible for creating an environment that encourages employees to embrace the culture and the desired values as they do their jobs. In fact, research shows that the behavior of managers is the single most important influence on an individual’s decision to act ethically or unethically.42 People look to see what those in authority are doing and use that as a benchmark for acceptable practices and expectations. CHAPTER 5 | MANAGING SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS Finally, as we discussed in Chapter 2, a strong culture exerts more influence on employees than a weak one. If a culture is strong and supports high ethical standards, it has a powerful and positive influence on the decision to act ethically or unethically. For example, IBM has a strong culture that has long stressed ethical dealings with customers, employees, business partners, and communities.43 To reinforce the importance of ethical behaviors, the company developed an explicitly detailed set of guidelines for business conduct and ethics. And the penalty for violating the guidelines: disciplinary actions including dismissal. IBM’s managers continually reinforce the importance of ethical behavior and reinforce the fact that a person’s actions and decisions are important to the way the organization is viewed. ISSUE INTENSITY. A student who would never consider breaking into an instructor’s office to steal an accounting exam doesn’t think twice about asking a friend who took the same course from the same instructor last semester what questions were on an exam. Similarly, a manager might think nothing about taking home a few office supplies yet be highly concerned about the possible embezzlement of company funds. These examples illustrate the final factor that influences ethical behavior: the intensity of the ethical issue itself.44 As Exhibit 5-5 shows, six characteristics determine issue intensity or how important an ethical issue is to an individual: greatness of harm, consensus of wrong, probability of harm, immediacy of consequences, proximity to victim(s), and concentration of effect. These factors suggest that the larger the number of people harmed, the more agreement that the action is wrong, the greater the likelihood that the action will cause harm, the more immediately that the consequences of the action will be felt, the closer the person feels to the victim(s), and the more concentrated the effect of the action on the victim(s), the greater the issue intensity or importance. When an ethical issue is important, employees are more likely to behave ethically. Ethics in an International Context Are ethical standards universal? Although some common moral beliefs exist, social and cultural differences between countries are important factors that determine ethical and unethical EXHIBIT 5-5 How much agreement is there that this action is wrong? Issue Intensity How likely is it that this action will cause harm? How many people will be harmed? Consensus of Wrong Greatness of Harm Probability of Harm Issue Intensity Concentration of Effect How concentrated is the effect of the action on the victim(s)? Immediacy of Consequences Proximity to Victim(s) How close are the potential victims? values-based management The organization’s values guide employees in the way they do their jobs Will harm be felt immediately? 133 134 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES behavior.45 For example, the manager of a Mexican firm bribes several high-ranking government officials in Mexico City to secure a profitable government contract. Although this business practice is acceptable in Mexico, it’s unethical (and illegal) in the United States. Should Coca-Cola employees in Saudi Arabia adhere to U.S. ethical standards, or should they follow local standards of acceptable behavior? If Airbus (a European company) pays a “broker’s fee” to an intermediary to get a major contract with a Middle Eastern airline, should Boeing be restricted from doing the same because such practices are considered improper in the United States? (Note: In the United Kingdom, the Law Commission, a governmental advisory body, has said that bribing officials in foreign countries should be a criminal offense. It said that claims of “it’s local custom” should not be a reason for allowing it.46) Recently, British defense giant BAE, which has been the target of various bribery and corruption allegations, was ordered to “submit to the supervision of an ethics monitor and pay nearly $500 million to resolve the corruption allegations.”47 In the case of payments to influence foreign officials or politicians, U.S. mangers are guided by the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), which makes it illegal to knowingly corrupt a foreign official. However, even this law doesn’t always reduce ethical dilemmas to black and white. In some countries, government bureaucrat salaries are low because custom dictates that they receive small payments from those they serve. Payoffs to these bureaucrats “grease the machinery” and ensure that things get done. The FCPA does not expressly prohibit small payoffs to foreign government employees whose duties are primarily administrative or clerical when such payoffs are an accepted part of doing business in that country. Any action other than this is illegal. In 2009, the U.S. Department of Justice brought 11 FCPA enforcement actions against corporations and 33 against individuals.48 It’s important for individual managers working in foreign cultures to recognize the social, cultural, and political-legal influences on what is appropriate and acceptable behavior.49 And international businesses must clarify their ethical guidelines so that employees know what’s expected of them while working in a foreign location, which adds another dimension to making ethical judgments. Another guide to being ethical in international business is the Global Compact, which is a document created by the United Nations outlining principles for doing business globally in the areas of human rights, labor, the environment, and anticorruption. (See Exhibit 5-6.) EXHIBIT 5-6 Ten Principles of the UN Global Compact Human Rights Principle 1: Support and respect the protection of international human rights within their sphere of influence. Principle 2: Make sure business corporations are not complicit in human rights abuses. Labor Standards Principle 3: Freedom of association and the effective recognition of the right to collective bargaining. Principle 4: The elimination of all forms of forced and compulsory labor. Principle 5: The effective abolition of child labor. Principle 6: The elimination of discrimination in respect to employment and occupation. Environment Principle 7: Support a precautionary approach to environmental challenges. Principle 8: Undertake initiatives to promote greater environmental responsibility. Principle 9: Encourage the development and diffusion of environmentally friendly technologies. Anti-Corruption Principle 10: Businesses should work against corruption in all its forms, including extortion and bribery. Source: Courtesy of UN Global Compact. CHAPTER 5 | MANAGING SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS 135 More than 7,700 corporate participants and stakeholders from over 130 countries have signed the Compact, making it the world’s largest voluntary corporate citizenship initiative.50 The goal of the Compact is a more sustainable and inclusive global economy. Organizations making this commitment do so because they believe that the world business community plays a significant role in improving economic and social conditions. In addition, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has made fighting bribery and corruption in international business a high priority. The centerpiece of its efforts is the Anti-Bribery Convention (or set of rules and guidelines), which was the first global instrument to combat corruption in cross-border business deals. To date, significant gains have been made in fighting corruption in the 38 countries that have ratified it.51 Encouraging Ethical Behavior At a Senate hearing exploring the accusations that Wall Street firm Goldman Sachs deceived its clients during the housing-market meltdown, Arizona senator John McCain said, “I don’t know if Goldman has done anything illegal, but there’s no doubt their behavior was unethical.”52 You have to wonder what the firm’s managers were thinking or doing while such ethically questionable decisions and actions were occurring. Managers can do a number of things if they’re serious about encouraging ethical behaviors—hire employees with high ethical standards, establish codes of ethics, lead by example, and so forth. By themselves, such actions won’t have much of an impact. But if an organization has a comprehensive ethics program in place, it can potentially improve an organization’s ethical climate. The key variable, however, is potentially. There are no guarantees that a well-designed ethics program will lead to the desired outcome. Sometimes corporate ethics programs are little more than public relations gestures that do little to influence managers and employees. For instance, Sears had a long history of encouraging ethical business practices through its corporate Office of Ethics and Business Practices. However, its ethics programs didn’t stop managers from illegally trying to collect payments from bankrupt charge account holders or from routinely deceiving automotive service center customers into thinking they needed unnecessary repairs. Even Enron, often referred to as the “poster child” of corporate wrongdoing, outlined values in its final annual report that most would consider ethical—communication, respect, integrity, and excellence. Yet the way top managers behaved didn’t reflect those values at all.53 Let’s look at some specific ways that managers can encourage ethical behavior and create a comprehensive ethics program. Employee Selection The selection process (interviews, tests, background checks, and so forth) should be viewed as an opportunity to learn about an individual’s level of moral development, personal values, ego strength, and locus of control.54 However, a carefully designed selection process isn’t foolproof and, even under the best circumstances, individuals with questionable standards of right and wrong may be hired. Such an issue can be overcome if other ethics controls are in place. Codes of Ethics and Decision Rules George David, former CEO and chairman of Hartford, Connecticut-based United Technologies Corporation, believed in the power of a code of ethics. That’s why UTC has always had one that was quite explicit and detailed. Employees know the behavioral expectations, especially when it comes to ethics. UBS AG, the Swiss bank, also has an explicit employee code crafted by CEO Oswald Grübel that bans staff from helping clients cheat on their taxes.55 However, not all organizations have such explicit ethical guidelines. 5.4 LEARNING OUTCOME Describe management’s role in encouraging ethical behavior. 136 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES Uncertainty about what is and is not ethical can be a problem for employees. A code of ethics, a formal statement of an organization’s values and the ethical rules it expects employees to follow, is a popular choice for reducing that ambiguity. Research shows that 97 percent of organizations with more than 10,000 employees have a written code of ethics. Even in smaller organizations, nearly 93 percent have one.56 And codes of ethics are becoming more popular globally. Research by the Institute for Global Ethics says that shared values such as honesty, fairness, respect, responsibility, and caring are pretty much universally embraced.57 In addition, a survey of businesses in 22 countries found that 78 percent have formally stated ethics standards and codes of ethics; and more than 85 percent of Fortune Global 200 companies have a business code of ethics.58 What should a code of ethics look like? It should be specific enough to show employees the spirit in which they’re supposed to do things yet loose enough to allow for freedom of judgment. A survey of companies’ codes of ethics found their content tended to fall into three categories as shown in Exhibit 5-7.59 Unfortunately, codes of ethics may not work as well as we think they should. A survey of employees in U.S. businesses found that 49 percent of those surveyed had observed ethical or legal violations in the previous 12 months including such things as conflicts of interest, EXHIBIT 5-7 Codes of Ethics Cluster 1. Be a Dependable Organizational Citizen 1. Comply with safety, health, and security regulations. 2. Demonstrate courtesy, respect, honesty, and fairness. 3. Illegal drugs and alcohol at work are prohibited. 4. Manage personal finances well. 5. Exhibit good attendance and punctuality. 6. Follow directives of supervisors. 7. Do not use abusive language. 8. Dress in business attire. 9. Firearms at work are prohibited. Cluster 2. Do Not Do Anything Unlawful or Improper That Will Harm the Organization 1. Conduct business in compliance with all laws. 2. Payments for unlawful purposes are prohibited. 3. Bribes are prohibited. 4. Avoid outside activities that impair duties. 5. Maintain confidentiality of records. 6. Comply with all antitrust and trade regulations. 7. Comply with all accounting rules and controls. 8. Do not use company property for personal benefit. 9. Employees are personally accountable for company funds. 10. Do not propagate false or misleading information. 11. Make decisions without regard for personal gain. Cluster 3. Be Good to Customers 1. Convey true claims in product advertisements. 2. Perform assigned duties to the best of your ability. 3. Provide products and services of the highest quality. Source: F. R. David, “An Empirical Study of Codes of Business Ethics: A Strategic Perspective,” paper presented at the 48th Annual Academy of Management Conference, Anaheim, California, August 1988. Used with permission of Fred David. CHAPTER 5 | MANAGING SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS 137 EXHIBIT 5-8 Step 1: What is the ethical dilemma? Step 2: Who are the affected stakeholders? A Process for Addressing Ethical Dilemmas Step 3: What personal, organizational, and external factors are important in this decision? Step 4: What are possible alternatives? Step 5: What is my decision and how will I act on it? abusive or intimidating behavior, and lying to employees. And 37 percent of those employees didn’t report observed misconduct.60 Does this mean that codes of ethics shouldn’t be developed? No. However, in doing so, managers should use these suggestions:61 1. Organizational leaders should model appropriate behavior and reward those who act ethically. 2. All managers should continually reaffirm the importance of the ethics code and consistently discipline those who break it. 3. The organization’s stakeholders (employees, customers, and so forth) should be considered as an ethics code is developed or improved. 4. Managers should communicate and reinforce the ethics code regularly. 5. Managers should use the five-step process (see Exhibit 5-8) to guide employees when faced with ethical dilemmas. Leadership In 2007, Peter Löscher was hired as CEO of German company Siemens to clean up a global bribery scandal that cost the company a record-setting $1.34 billion in fines. His approach: “Stick to your principles. Have a clear ethical north. Be trusted and be the role model of your company . . . true leaders have a set of core values they publicly commit to and live by in good times and bad.”62 Doing business ethically requires a commitment from top managers. Why? Because they’re the ones who uphold the shared values and set the cultural tone. They’re role models in terms of both words and actions, though what they do is far more important than what they say. If top managers, for example, take company resources for their personal use, inflate their expense accounts, or give favored treatment to friends, they imply that such behavior is acceptable for all employees. Top managers also set the tone by their reward and punishment practices. The choices of whom and what are rewarded with pay increases and promotions send a strong signal to employees. As we said earlier, when an employee is rewarded for achieving impressive results in an ethically questionable manner, it indicates to others that those ways are acceptable. When an employee does something unethical, managers must punish the offender and publicize the fact by making the outcome visible to everyone in the organization. This practice sends a message that doing wrong has a price and it’s not in employees’ best interests to act unethically! Job Goals and Performance Appraisal Employees in three Internal Revenue Service offices were found in the bathrooms flushing tax returns and other related documents down the toilets. When questioned, they openly admitted doing it, but offered an interesting explanation for their behavior. The employees’ supervisors had been pressuring them to complete more work in less time. If the piles of tax returns weren’t processed and moved off their desks more quickly, they were told their performance reviews and salary raises would be adversely affected. Frustrated by few resources code of ethics A formal statement of an organization’s primary values and the ethical rules it expects its employees to follow An ethical leader is one who acts ethically, that is, one who makes decisions that are consistent with his or her belief system. 138 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES and an overworked computer system, the employees decided to “flush away” the paperwork on their desks. Although these employees knew what they did was wrong, it illustrates how powerful unrealistic goals and performance appraisals can be.63 Under the stress of unrealistic goals, otherwise ethical employees may feel they have no choice but to do whatever is necessary to meet those goals. Also, goal achievement is usually a key issue in performance appraisal. If performance appraisals focus only on economic goals, ends will begin to justify means. To encourage ethical behavior, both ends and means should be evaluated. For example, a manager’s annual review of employees might include a point-by-point evaluation of how their decisions measured up against the company’s code of ethics as well as how well goals were met. Ethics Training More organizations are setting up seminars, workshops, and similar ethics training programs to encourage ethical behavior. Such training programs aren’t without controversy as the primary concern is whether ethics can be taught. Critics stress that the effort is pointless because people establish their individual value systems when they’re young. Proponents note, however, several studies have shown that values can be learned after early childhood. In addition, they cite evidence that shows that teaching ethical problem solving can make an actual difference in ethical behaviors;64 that training has increased individuals’ level of moral development;65 and that, if nothing else, ethics training increases awareness of ethical issues in business.66 How can ethics be taught? Let’s look at an example involving global defense contractor Lockheed Martin, one of the pioneers in the case-based approach to ethics training.67 Lockheed Martin’s employees take annual ethics training courses delivered by their managers. The main focus of these short courses is Lockheed Martin–specific case situations “chosen for their relevance to department or job-specific issues.” In each department, employee teams review and discuss the cases and then apply an “Ethics Meter” to “rate whether the real-life decisions were ethical, unethical, or somewhere in between.” For example, one of the possible ratings on the Ethics Meter, “On Thin Ice,” is explained as “bordering on unethical and should raise a red flag.” After the teams have applied their ratings, managers lead discussions about the ratings and examine “which of the company’s core ethics principles were applied or ignored in the cases.” In addition to its ethics training, Lockheed Martin has a widely used written code of ethics, an ethics helpline that employees can call for guidance on ethical issues, and ethics officers based in the company’s various business units. Cisco Systems’ ethics training program teaches employees such as the software engineers in this photo how to deal with ethical problems they encounter every day. Based on its own risk analysis and designed to fit the company’s corporate culture, the training parodies the American Idol TV show. The Web-based program shows cartoon contestants singing about various ethical workplace scenarios included in Cisco’s Code of Business Conduct and then poses questions to employees as to which judge’s answer they agree with. Employees can provide feedback, see how other employees respond, and view the official Cisco answer to help them learn how to make good ethical decisions that apply to their day-to-day jobs. CHAPTER 5 | MANAGING SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS 139 Independent Social Audits The fear of being caught can be an important deterrent to unethical behavior. Independent social audits, which evaluate decisions and management practices in terms of the organization’s code of ethics, increase that likelihood. Such audits can be regular evaluations or they can occur randomly with no prior announcement. An effective ethics program probably needs both. To maintain integrity, auditors should be responsible to the company’s board of directors and present their findings directly to the board. This arrangement gives the auditors clout and lessens the opportunity for retaliation from those being audited. Because the Sarbanes-Oxley Act holds businesses to more rigorous standards of financial disclosure and corporate governance, more organizations are finding the idea of independent social audits appealing. As the publisher of Business Ethics magazine stated, “The debate has shifted from whether to be ethical to how to be ethical.”68 Protective Mechanisms Employees who face ethical dilemmas need protective mechanisms so they can do what’s right without fear of reprimand. An organization might designate ethical counselors for employees facing an ethics dilemma. These advisors also might advocate the ethically “right” alternatives. Other organizations have appointed ethics officers who design, direct, and modify the organization’s ethics programs as needed.69 The Ethics and Compliance Officer Association is the world’s largest group of ethics and compliance practitioners with a total membership topping 1,100 (including more than half of the Fortune 100 companies) and covering several countries including, among others, the United States, Germany, India, Japan, and Canada.70 Social Responsibility and Ethics Issues in Today’s World Today’s managers continue to face challenges in being socially responsible and ethical. Next we examine three current issues: managing ethical lapses and social irresponsibility, social entrepreneurship, and promoting positive social change. Managing Ethical Lapses and Social Irresponsibility Even after public outrage over the Enron-era misdeeds, irresponsible and unethical practices by managers in all kinds of organizations haven’t gone away, as you’ve observed with some of the questionable behaviors that took place at financial services firms such as Goldman Sachs and Lehman Brothers. But what’s more alarming is what’s going on “in the trenches” in offices, warehouses, and stores. One survey reported that among 5,000 employees: 45 percent admitted falling asleep at work; 22 percent said they spread a rumor about a coworker; 18 percent said they snooped after hours; and 2 percent said they took credit for someone else’s work.71 Unfortunately, it’s not just at work that we see such behaviors. They’re prevalent throughout society. Studies conducted by the Center for Academic Integrity showed that 26 percent of college and university business majors admitted to “serious cheating” on exams and 54 percent admitted to cheating on written assignments. But business students weren’t the worst cheaters—that distinction belonged to journalism majors, of whom 27 percent said they had cheated.72 And a survey by Students in Free Enterprise (SIFE) found that only 19 percent of students would report a classmate who cheated.73 But even more frightening is what today’s teenagers say is “acceptable.” In a survey, 23 percent said they thought violence toward another person is acceptable on some level.74 What do such statistics say about what managers may have to deal with in the future? It’s not too far-fetched to say that organizations may have difficulty upholding high ethical standards when their future employees so readily accept unethical behavior. 5.5 LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss current social responsibility and ethics issues. 140 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES What can managers do? Two actions seem to be particularly important: ethical leadership and protecting those who report wrongdoing. ETHICAL LEADERSHIP. Not long after Herb Baum took over as CEO of Dial Corporation, he got a call from Reuben Mark, the CEO of competitor Colgate-Palmolive, who told him he had a copy of Dial’s strategic marketing plan that had come from a former Dial salesperson who recently had joined Colgate-Palmolive. Mark told Baum that he had not looked at it, didn’t intend to look at, and was returning it. In addition, he himself was going to deal appropriately with the new salesperson.75 As this example illustrates, managers must provide ethical leadership. As we said earlier, what managers do has a strong influence on employees’ decisions whether to behave ethically. When managers cheat, lie, steal, manipulate, take advantage of situations or people, or treat others unfairly, what kind of signal are they sending to employees (or other stakeholders)? Probably not the one they want to send. Exhibit 5-9 gives some suggestions on how managers can provide ethical leadership. PROTECTION OF EMPLOYEES WHO RAISE ETHICAL ISSUES. What would you do if you saw other employees doing something illegal, immoral, or unethical? Would you step forward? Many of us wouldn’t because of the perceived risks. That’s why it’s important for managers to assure employees who raise ethical concerns or issues that they will face no personal or career risks. These individuals, often called whistle-blowers, can be a key part of any company’s ethics program. For example, Sherron Watkins, who was a vice president at Enron, clearly outlined her concerns about the company’s accounting practices in a letter to chairman Ken Lay. Her statement that, “I am incredibly nervous that we will implode in a wave of accounting scandals” couldn’t have been more prophetic.76 However, surveys show that most observers of wrongdoing don’t report it and that’s the attitude managers have to address.77 How can they protect employees so they’re willing to step up if they see unethical or illegal things occurring? One way is to set up toll-free ethics hotlines. For instance, Dell has an ethics hotline that employees can call anonymously to report infractions that the company will then investigate.78 In addition, managers need to create a culture where bad news can be heard and acted on before it’s too late. Michael Josephson, founder of the Josephson Institute of Ethics [www.josephsoninstitute.org] said, “It is absolutely and unequivocally important to establish a culture where it is possible for employees to complain and protest and to get heard.”79 Even if some whistle-blowers have a personal agenda they’re pursuing, it’s important to take them seriously. Finally, the federal legislation Sarbanes-Oxley offers some legal protection. Any manager who retaliates against an employee for reporting violations faces a stiff penalty: a 10-year jail sentence.80 Unfortunately, despite this protection, hundreds of employees who have stepped forward and revealed wrongdoings at their companies have been fired or let go from their jobs.81 So at the present time, it’s not a perfect solution, but is a step in the right direction. Social Entrepreneurship The world’s social problems are many and viable solutions are few. But numerous people and organizations are trying to do something. For instance, Reed Paget, founder and CEO EXHIBIT 5-9 Being an Ethical Leader • Be a good role model by being ethical and honest. • Tell the truth always. • Don’t hide or manipulate information. • Be willing to admit your failures. • Share your personal values by regularly communicating them to employees. • Stress the organization’s or team’s important shared values. • Use the reward system to hold everyone accountable to the values. CHAPTER 5 | MANAGING SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS of British bottled water company Belu, made his company the world’s first to become carbon-neutral. Its bottles are made from corn and can be composted into soil. Also, Belu’s profits go toward projects that bring clean water to parts of the world that lack access to it. Paget has chosen to pursue a purpose as well as a profit.82 He is an example of a social entrepreneur, an individual or organization who seeks out opportunities to improve society by using practical, innovative, and sustainable approaches.83 “What business entrepreneurs are to the economy, social entrepreneurs are to social change.”84 Social entrepreneurs want to make the world a better place and have a driving passion to make that happen. For example, AgSquared aims to help small farmers, who make up 90 percent of the farms in the United States, keep better track of critical information such as basic accounting of seeds, soil data and weather mapping, and even best practices from the farm community.85 Also, social entrepreneurs use creativity and ingenuity to solve problems. For instance, Seattle-based PATH (Program for Appropriate Technology in Health) is an international nonprofit organization that uses low-cost technology to provide needed health-care solutions for poor, developing countries. By collaborating with public groups and for-profit businesses, PATH has developed simple life-saving solutions, such as clean birthing kits, credit-card sized lab test kits, and disposable vaccination syringes that can’t be reused. PATH has pioneered innovative approaches to solving global medical problems.86 What can we learn from these social entrepreneurs? Although many organizations have committed to doing business ethically and responsibly, perhaps there is more they can do, as these social entrepreneurs show. Maybe, as in the case of PATH, it’s simply a matter of business organizations collaborating with public groups or nonprofit organizations to address a social issue. Or maybe, as in the case of AgSquared, it’s providing expertise where needed. Or it may involve nurturing individuals who passionately and unwaveringly believe they have an idea that could make the world a better place and simply need the organizational support to pursue it. Businesses Promoting Positive Social Change Since 1946, Target has contributed 5 percent of its annual income to support community needs, an amount that adds up to more than $3 million a week. And it’s not alone in those efforts. “Over the past two decades, a growing number of corporations, both within and beyond the United States, have been engaging in activities that promote positive social change.”87 Businesses can do this in a couple of ways: through corporate philanthropy and through employee volunteering efforts. CORPORATE PHILANTHROPY. Corporate philanthropy can be an effective way for companies to address societal problems.88 For instance, the breast cancer “pink” campaign and the global AIDS Red campaign (started by Bono) are ways that companies support social causes.89 Many organizations also donate money to various causes that employees and customers care about. In 2008 (latest numbers available), the three largest cash givers—Walmart, Bank of America, and ExxonMobil—donated more than $734 million.90 Others have funded their own foundations to support various social issues. For example, Google’s foundation—called DotOrg by its employees—has about $2 billion in assets that whistle-blower social entrepreneur Individuals who raise ethical concerns or issues to others An individual or organization who seeks out opportunities to improve society by using practical, innovative, and sustainable approaches 141 Matt Flannery (right) and Premel Shah are trying to do something about the world’s social problems. Social entrepreneurs Flannery, cofounder and CEO, and Shah, president, operate their nonprofit organization Kiva.org by combining microfinance with the Internet to create a global community of lenders for entrepreneurs in developing nations and the United States. Kiva’s mission is to connect people, through lending, for the sake of alleviating poverty. Practical and innovative, Kiva promotes partnership relationships that are characterized by mutual dignity and respect rather than benefactor relationships. 142 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES it will use to support five areas: developing systems to help predict and prevent disease pandemics, empowering the poor with information about public services, creating jobs by investing in small and midsized businesses in the developing world, accelerating the commercialization of plug-in cars, and making renewable energy cheaper than coal.91 EMPLOYEE VOLUNTEERING EFFORTS. Employee volunteering is another popular way for businesses to be involved in promoting social change. For instance, Molson-Coors’ elevenmember executive team spent a full day at their annual team-building retreat building a house in Las Vegas with Habitat for Humanity. PricewaterhouseCoopers employees renovated an abandoned school in Newark, New Jersey. Every Wachovia employee is given six paid days off from work each year to volunteer in his or her community. Other businesses are encouraging their employees to volunteer in various ways. The Committee to Encourage Corporate Philanthropy says that more than 90 percent of its members had volunteer programs and almost half encouraged volunteerism by providing paid time off or by creating volunteer events.92 Many businesses have found that such efforts not only benefit communities, but enhance employees’ work efforts and motivation. Do? What Would You Let’s Get Real: My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma, page 124 John Emerman Owner The Stone Oven Bakery & Café Cleveland, OH TOMS is doing a great act of charity and kindness. The challenge is to stay profitable while continuing to do good humanitarian work. Presumably, TOMS shoes are priced somewhat higher than those of their competition in order to pay for the donated shoes. The question then becomes how much more would people be willing to pay for a pair of shoes knowing that they are helping someone on the other side of the globe. 10 percent? 20 percent? The answer to this question depends on the market(s) that TOMS serves. Certainly, a globally conscious person would be willing to pay the higher price. The company should therefore direct their marketing and advertising efforts toward this sector of the market. The focus, of course, must be on educating the consumer on the importance of sending shoes to South America and the good that results from this act of generosity. 51 chapter PREPARING FOR: Exams/Quizzes CHAPTER SUMMARY by Learning Outcomes Discuss what it means to be socially responsible and what factors influence that decision. LEARNING OUTCOME 5.1 LEARNING OUTCOME 5.2 LEARNING OUTCOME 5.3 LEARNING OUTCOME 5.4 Social obligation, which reflects the classical view of social responsibility, is when a firm engages in social actions because of its obligation to meet certain economic and legal responsibilities. Social responsiveness is when a firm engages in social actions in response to some popular social need. Social responsibility is a business’s intention, beyond its economic and legal obligations, to pursue long-term goals that are good for society. Both of these reflect the socioeconomic view of social responsibility. Determining whether organizations should be socially involved can be done by looking at arguments for and against it. Other ways are to assess the impact of social involvement on a company’s economic performance and evaluate the performance of SRI funds versus non-SRI funds. We can conclude that a company’s being socially responsible doesn’t appear to hurt its economic performance. Explain green management and how organizations can go green. Green management is when managers consider the impact of their organization on the natural environment. Organizations can “go green” in different ways. The light green approach is doing what is required legally, which is social obligation. Using the market approach, organizations respond to the environmental preferences of their customers. Using the stakeholder approach, organizations respond to the environmental demands of multiple stakeholders. Both the market and stakeholder approaches can be viewed as social responsiveness. With an activist or dark green approach, an organization looks for ways to respect and preserve the earth and its natural resources, which can be viewed as social responsibility. Green actions can be evaluated by examining reports that companies compile about their environmental performance, by looking for compliance with global standards for environmental management (ISO 14000), and by using the Global 100 list of the most sustainable corporations in the world. Discuss the factors that lead to ethical and unethical behavior. Ethics refers to the principles, values, and beliefs that define right and wrong decisions and behavior. The factors that affect ethical and unethical behavior include an individual’s level of moral development (preconventional, conventional, or principled), individual characteristics (values and personality variables—ego strength and locus of control), structural variables (structural design, use of goals, performance appraisal systems, and reward allocation procedures), organizational culture (shared values and cultural strength), and issue intensity (greatness of harm, consensus of wrong, probability of harm, immediacy of consequences, proximity to victims, and concentration of effect). Since ethical standards aren’t universal, managers should know what they can and cannot do legally as defined by the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. It’s also important to recognize any cultural differences and to clarify ethical guidelines for employees working in different global locations. Finally, managers should know about the principles of the Global Compact and the Anti-Bribery Convention. Describe management’s role in encouraging ethical behavior. The behavior of managers is the single most important influence on an individual’s decision to act ethically or unethically. Some specific ways managers can encourage ethical 143 144 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES behavior include paying attention to employee selection, having and using a code of ethics, recognizing the important ethical leadership role they play and how what they do is far more important than what they say, making sure that goals and the performance appraisal process don’t reward goal achievement without taking into account how those goals were achieved, using ethics training and independent social audits, and establishing protective mechanisms. LEARNING OUTCOME 5.5 Discuss current social responsibility and ethics issues. Managers can manage ethical lapses and social irresponsibility by being strong ethical leaders and by protecting employees who raise ethical issues. The example set by managers has a strong influence on whether employees behave ethically. Ethical leaders also are honest, share their values, stress important shared values, and use the reward system appropriately. Managers can protect whistle-blowers (employees who raise ethical issues or concerns) by encouraging them to come forward, by setting up tollfree ethics hotlines, and by establishing a culture in which employees can complain and be heard without fear of reprisal. Social entrepreneurs play an important role in solving social problems by seeking out opportunities to improve society by using practical, innovative, and sustainable approaches. Social entrepreneurs want to make the world a better place and have a driving passion to make that happen. Businesses can promote positive social change through corporate philanthropy and employee volunteering efforts. 5.1 5.5 REVIEW AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. Differentiate between social obligation, social responsiveness, and social responsibility. 2. What does social responsibility mean to you personally? Do you think business organizations should be socially responsible? Explain. 3. What is green management and how can organizations go green? 4. What factors influence whether a person behaves ethically or unethically? Explain all relevant factors. 5. Do you think values-based management is just a “dogooder” ploy? Explain your answer. 6. Discuss specific ways managers can encourage ethical behavior. 7. Internet file sharing programs are popular among college students. These programs work by allowing non-organizational users to access any local network where desired files are located. Because these types of file sharing programs tend to clog bandwidth, local users’ ability to access and use a local network is reduced. What ethical and social responsibilities does a university have in this situation? To whom do they have a responsibility? What guidelines might you suggest for university decision makers? 8. What are some problems that could be associated with employee whistle-blowing for (a) the whistle-blower and (b) the organization? 9. Describe the characteristics and behaviors of someone you consider to be an ethical person. How could the types of decisions and actions this person engages in be encouraged in a workplace? 10. Explain the ethical and social responsibility issues facing managers today. PREPARING FOR: My Career ETHICS DILEMMA “Apple’s chief takes a medical leave after months of denial that his health is declining; many feel because he is so closely linked with the firm’s creative vision, Steve Jobs SKILLS EXERCISE Developing Your Developing Trust Skill About the Skill Trust plays an important role in the manager’s relationships with his or her employees.94 Given the importance of trust in setting a good ethical example for employees, today’s managers should actively seek to develop it within their work group. Steps in Practicing the Skill 1. Practice openness. Mistrust comes as much from what people don’t know as from what they do. Being open with employees leads to confidence and trust. Keep people informed. Make clear the criteria you use in making decisions. Explain the rationale for your decisions. Be forthright and candid about problems. Fully disclose all relevant information. 2. Be fair. Before making decisions or taking actions, consider how others will perceive them in terms of objectivity and fairness. Give credit where credit is due. Be objective and impartial in performance appraisals. Pay attention to equity perceptions in distributing rewards. 3. Speak your feelings. Managers who convey only hard facts come across as cold, distant, and unfeeling. When you share your feelings, others will see that you are real and human. They will know you for who you are and their respect for you is likely to increase. 4. Tell the truth. Being trustworthy means being credible. If honesty is critical to credibility, then you must be perceived as someone who tells the truth. Employees are more tolerant of hearing something “they don’t want to hear” than of finding out that their manager lied to them. 5. Be consistent. People want predictability. Mistrust comes from not knowing what to expect. Take the time to think about your values and beliefs and let those values and beliefs consistently guide your decisions. When you know what’s important to you, your actions will follow, and you will project a consistency that earns trust. 6. Fulfill your promises. Trust requires that people believe that you are dependable. You need to ensure that you keep your word. Promises made must be promises kept. should be required to release more medical information.” What do you think? Do the heads of publicly traded firms have a right to medical privacy? What ethical issues might arise in such a situation?93 7. Maintain confidences. You trust those whom you believe to be discreet and those on whom you can rely. If people open up to you and make themselves vulnerable by telling you something in confidence, they need to feel assured you won’t discuss it with others or betray that confidence. If people perceive you as someone who leaks personal confidences or someone who can’t be depended on, you’ve lost their trust. 8. Demonstrate competence. Develop the admiration and respect of others by demonstrating technical and professional ability. Pay particular attention to developing and displaying your communication, negotiation, and other interpersonal skills. Practicing the Skill Read through the following scenario. Write a paper describing how you would handle the situation. Be sure to refer to the eight behaviors described for developing trust. Scenario Donna Romines is the shipping department manager at Tastefully Tempting, a gourmet candy company based in Phoenix. Orders for the company’s candy come from around the world. Your six-member team processes these orders. Needless to say, the two months before Christmas are quite hectic. Everybody counts the days until December 24 when the phones finally stop ringing off the wall, at least for a couple of days. You and all of your team members breathe a sigh of relief as the last box of candy is sent on its way out the door. When the company was first founded five years ago, after the holiday rush, the owners would shut down Tastefully Tempting for two weeks after Christmas. However, as the business has grown and moved into Internet sales, that practice has become too costly. There’s too much business to be able to afford that luxury. And the rush for Valentine’s Day orders start pouring in the week after Christmas. Although the two-week post-holiday company-wide shutdown has been phased out formally, some departments have found it difficult to get employees to gear up once again after the Christmas break. The employees who come to work after Christmas usually accomplish little. This year, though, things have got to change. You know that the cultural “tradition” won’t be easy to overcome, but your shipping team needs to be ready to tackle the orders that have piled up. After all, Tastefully Tempting’s customers want their orders filled promptly and correctly! 145 146 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES WORKING TOGETHER Team Exercise In an effort to be (or at least appear to be) socially responsible, many organizations donate money to philanthropic and charitable causes. In addition, many organizations ask their employees to make individual donations to these causes. Suppose you’re the manager of a work team, and you know that several of your employees can’t afford to pledge money right now because of personal or financial problems. You’ve also been told by your supervisor that the CEO has been known to check the list of individual contributors to see who is and is not “supporting these very important causes.” Working together in a small group of three or four, answer the following questions: How would you handle this situation? What ethical guidelines might you suggest for individual and organizational contributions in such a situation? Create a company policy statement that expresses your ethical guidelines. MY TURN TO BE A MANAGER Find five different examples of organizational codes of ethics. Using Exhibit 5-7, describe what each contains. Compare and contrast the examples. Using the examples of codes of ethics you found, create what you feel would be an appropriate and effective organizational code of ethics. In addition, create your own personal code of ethics that you can use as a guide to ethical dilemmas. Take advantage of volunteer opportunities. Be sure to include these on your résumé. If possible, try to do things in these volunteer positions that will improve your managerial skills in planning, organizing, leading, or controlling. Go to the Global Reporting Initiative Web site [www.globalreporting.org] and choose three businesses from the list that have filed reports. Look at those reports and describe/evaluate what’s in them. In addition, identify the stakeholders that might be affected and how they might be affected by the company’s actions. Make a list of what green management things your school is doing. If you’re working, make a list of what green management things your employer is doing. Do some research on being green. Are there additional things your school or employer could be doing? Write a report to each describing any suggestions. (Look for ways that you could use these suggestions to be more “green” in your personal life.) Over the course of two weeks, see what ethical “dilemmas” you observe. These could be ones that you personally face or they could be ones that others (friends, colleagues, other students talking in the hallway or before class starts, or so forth) face. Write these dilemmas down and think about what you might do if faced with that dilemma. Interview two different managers about how they encourage their employees to be ethical. Write down their comments and discuss how these ideas might help you be a better manager. Steve’s and Mary’s suggested readings: Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind, The Smartest Guys in the Room: The Amazing Rise and Scandalous Fall of Enron (Portfolio, 2003); Barbara Ley Toffler, Final Accounting: Ambition, Greed, and the Fall of Arthur Andersen (Broadway Books, 2003); Joseph L. Badaracco, Jr., Leading Quietly: An Unorthodox Guide to Doing the Right Thing (Harvard Business School Press, 2002); and Kenneth Blanchard and Norman Vincent Peale, The Power of Ethical Management (Morrow, 1988). If you have the opportunity, take a class on business or managerial ethics or on social responsibility—often called business and society—or both. Not only will this look good on your résumé, it could help you personally grapple with some of the tough issues managers face in being ethical and responsible. In your own words, write down three things you learned in this chapter about being a good manager. Self-knowledge can be a powerful learning tool. Go to mymanagementlab.com and complete these self-assessment exercises: What Do I Value? How Do My Ethics Rate? Do I Trust Others? and Do Others See Me as Trusting? Using the results of your assessments, identify personal strengths and weaknesses. What will you do to reinforce your strengths and improve your weaknesses? CHAPTER 5 | MANAGING SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS CASE APPLICATION Lessons from Lehman Brothers: Will We Ever Learn? n September 15, 2008, financial services firm Lehman O Brothers filed for bankruptcy with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of New York.95 That action—the largest Chapter 11 filing in financial history—unleashed a “crisis of confidence that threw financial markets worldwide into turmoil, sparking the worst crisis since the Great Depression.” The fall of this Wall Street icon is, unfortunately, not a new one, as we’ve seen in the stories of Enron, WorldCom, and others. In a report released by bankruptcy court-appointed examiner Anton Valukas, Lehman executives and the firm’s auditor, Ernst & Young, were lambasted for actions that led to the firm’s collapse. He said, “Lehman repeatedly exceeded its own internal risk limits and controls, and a wide range of bad calls by its management led to the bank’s failure.” Let’s look behind the scenes at some of the issues. One of the major problems at Lehman was its culture and reward structure. Excessive risk taking by employees was openly lauded and rewarded handsomely. Individuals making questionable deals were hailed and treated as “conquering heroes.” On the other hand, anyone who questioned decisions was often ignored or overruled. For instance, Oliver “Greed” and “Crooks” are a sampling of comments recorded on a rendering of Lehman’s chief executive Richard Fuld by artist Geoffrey Raymond, who placed his painting outside of Lehman’s New York City offices and handed out markers to employees and pedestrians so they could write a message regarding the firm’s announcement that it was filing for bankruptcy. Budde, who served as an associate general counsel at Lehman for nine years, was responsible for preparing the firm’s public filings on executive compensation. Infuriated by what he felt was the firm’s “intentional under-representation of how much top executives were paid,” Budde argued with his bosses for years about that matter, to no avail. Then, one time he objected to a tax deal that an outside accounting firm had proposed to lower medical insurance costs saying, “My gut feeling was that this was just reshuffling some papers to get an expense off the balance sheet. It was not the right thing, and I told them.” However, Budde’s bosses disagreed and okayed the deal. Another problem at Lehman was the firm’s top leadership. Valukas’s report was highly critical of Lehman’s executives who “should have done more, done better.” He pointed out that the executives made the company’s problems worse by their conduct, which ranged from “serious but nonculpable errors of business judgment to actionable balance sheet manipulation.” Valukas went on to say that “former chief executive Richard Fuld was at least grossly negligent in causing Lehman to file misleading periodic reports.” These reports were part of an accounting device called “Repo 105.” Lehman used this device to get some $50 billion of undesirable assets off its balance sheet at the end of the first and second quarters of 2008, instead of selling those assets at a loss. The examiner’s report “included e-mails from Lehman’s global financial controller confirming that the only purpose or motive for Repo 105 transactions was reduction in the balance sheet, adding that there was no substance to the transactions.” Lehman’s auditor was aware of the use of Repo 105 but did not challenge or question it. Sufficient evidence indicated that Fuld knew about the use of it as well; however, he signed off on quarterly reports that made no mention of it. Fuld’s attorney said, “Mr. Fuld did not know what these 147 148 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES transactions were—he didn’t structure or negotiate them, nor was he aware of their accounting treatment.” A spokesperson from Ernst & Young (the auditor) said that, “Lehman’s bankruptcy was the result of a series of unprecedented adverse events in the financial markets.” Discussion Questions 1. Describe the situation at Lehman Brothers from an ethics perspective. What’s your opinion of what happened here? 2. What was the culture at Lehman Brothers like? How did this culture contribute to the company’s downfall? 3. What role did Lehman’s executives play in the company’s collapse? Were they being responsible and ethical? Discuss. 4. Could anything have been done differently at Lehman Brothers to prevent what happened? Explain. 5. After all the public uproar over Enron and then the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act to protect shareholders, why do you think we still continue to see these types of situations? Is it unreasonable to expect that businesses can and should act ethically? CASE APPLICATION Green Up on Aisle Two t’s probably the last company that you’d think of as going green.96 As the world’s largest retailer with more I than 8,400 stores globally, Walmart moves massive amounts of products and uses massive amounts of power and other resources to operate its business. But it’s also striving to transform itself into a company that’s seen as environmentally friendly. That’s why the company’s announcement that it would cut some 20 million metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions from its supply chain—the equivalent of removing more than 3.8 million cars from the road for a year—got widespread attention. This announcement came a few months after the company said that it would be creating a sustainability index of just how green its products are. The first part of Walmart’s three-phase plan was getting information from its more than 100,000 suppliers using a 15-question survey about their greenhouse gas emissions, water and solid waste reduction efforts, and other details about business practices. That information was received by October 2009, and the second-phase process of entering it into a massive database began. The third phase involves getting all that data eventually condensed into an easily understood universal rating system, similar to a nutrition label but focused on details about environmental and social sustainability. However, it’s likely that this effort won’t be complete until 2013. This isn’t the company’s first push toward being green. Walmart has started many environmental initiatives in recent years including improving the efficiency of its truck fleet and working with 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, which produces DVDs, to cut greenhouse gas emissions by eliminating the plastic knob in the center of its CD cases. The most difficult part of this latest green initiative has been persuading its suppliers to spend the time and money tracking and lessening their environmental impact. Essentially, suppliers are being asked to “examine the carbon lifecycle of their products, from the raw materials used in manufacturing all the way through to the recycling phase.” Although supplier participation was not mandatory, Walmart made it clear that it was interested in doing business only with suppliers that shared its goals. The company is also collaborating with organizations such as the Environmental Defense Fund, ClearCarbon, the Applied Sustainability Center at the University of Arkansas, and the Carbon Disclosure Project. These groups will advise Walmart and its suppliers and help in evaluating and measuring reductions. CHAPTER 5 | MANAGING SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS Discussion Questions 1. What do you think of Walmart’s green initiatives? Will it ever be able to achieve the reputation of being environmentally friendly? Discuss. 2. Why do you think suppliers might be reluctant to be involved in this initiative? How might that reluctance be addressed? Although it said supplier participation was not mandatory, does Walmart appear to be “forcing” suppliers to participate? 3. Why do you think it’s important for Walmart to collaborate with other green-minded organizations? 4. What could other organizations learn from Walmart’s green initiatives? 149 Meet the Manager Reginald Lo Vice President of Professional Services Third Sky, Inc. Alameda, CA MY JOB: I’m vice president for professional services at Third Sky, Inc. Third Sky is a consulting company that helps IT organizations deliver better service to their customers. Third Sky provides education on industry best practices, consulting services for planning and executing improvement initiatives, and technology implementation services to enable the adoption of best practices. I play a dual role at Third Sky: I manage all of Third Sky’s consultants and oversee the development of new service offerings; and I am a consultant who goes to customers’ sites to help them improve. BEST PART OF MY JOB: The thanks I receive from customers when we teach them industry best practices and help them adopt these practices. We have made their lives less hectic and enabled them to provide better service to their customers, who in turn thank them. Compare and contrast views on the change process. page 152 Classify types of organizational change. page 154 Explain how to manage resistance to change. page 158 Discuss contemporary issues in managing change. page 159 Describe techniques for stimulating innovation. page 165 WORST PART OF MY JOB: The “administrivia.” Unfortunately, one must do certain activities in order to maintain good control of an organization (e.g. reviewing and approving timesheets and expense reports, triggering invoicing, etc.). BEST MANAGEMENT ADVICE EVER RECEIVED: There are three types of people in an organization: the change agent, the change participant, and the change resister. The change agents are the happiest because they control their own destiny. The change resisters aren’t going to be around for very long. 151 A Manager’s Dilemma After 29 years of flight, NASA’s space the president thinks it is too expensive shuttle program is expected to end and flawed and wants to use private 1 in 2010. Over that time span, we’ve enterprise until NASA can develop seen highs and lows, triumphs more advanced space vehicles. The and tragedies. Dismantling a pro- reputation of the United States as a gram of this magnitude involves leader in space exploration, being massive changes for managers the only country to put people on and employees. the moon, is at stake. But there’s One change that managers must more than national pride.“Losing the deal with is how the agency will be lead in space has national security structured to revitalize the space pro- and industrial consequences.” gram—a decision that’s not theirs to The most critical change facing make. Because it is a governmental NASA’s managers is what to do with its exploration program is debated and agency, lawmakers will make the workforce of highly trained and skilled decided. How will they keep employ- decision. Congress wants to continue individuals while the future of its space ees focused during this change? with NASA’s existing space exploration program, Constellation. But What Would You Do? The managerial challenges facing NASA’S leaders in encouraging continued innovative efforts among all the agency’s employees during uncertain times is certainly not unique. Big companies and small businesses, universities and colleges, state and city governments, and even the military are forced to be innovative. Although innovation has always been a part of the manager’s job, it has become even more important in recent years. We’ll describe why innovation is important and how managers can manage innovation in this chapter. Because innovation is often closely tied to an organization’s change efforts, we’ll start by looking at change and how managers manage change. 6.1 LEARNING OUTCOME Compare and contrast views on the change process. The Change Process When John Lechleiter assumed the CEO’s job at Eli Lilly, he sent each of his senior executives a gift—“a digital clock counting down, second by second, to October 23, 2011. That’s the day Lilly’s $5 billion-a-year schizophrenia pill, Zyprexa, is no longer under patent.” Between 2010 and the end of 2016, Lilly stands to lose $10 billion in annual revenues as patents on three of its key drugs expire. Needless to say, the company has had to make some organizational changes as it picks up the pace of drug development.2 Lilly’s managers are doing what managers everywhere must do—implement change! If it weren’t for change, a manager’s job would be relatively easy. Planning would be simple because tomorrow would be no different from today. The issue of effective organizational design would also be resolved because the environment would not be uncertain and there would be no need to redesign the structure. Similarly, decision making would be dramatically streamlined because the outcome of each alternative could be predicted with almost certain accuracy. But that’s not the way it is. Change is an organizational reality.3 Organizations face change because external and internal factors create the need for change (see Exhibit 6-1). When managers recognize that change is needed, then what? How do they respond? Two Views of the Change Process Two very different metaphors can be used to describe the change process.4 One metaphor envisions the organization as a large ship crossing a calm sea. The ship’s captain and crew know exactly where they’re going because they’ve made the trip many times before. Change comes in the form of an occasional storm, a brief distraction in an otherwise calm and predictable trip. 152 CHAPTER 6 | MANAGING CHANGE AND INNOVATION EXHIBIT 6-1 External • • • • 153 External and Internal Forces for Change Changing consumer needs and wants New governmental laws Changing technology Economic changes Internal • • • • New organizational strategy Change in composition of workforce New equipment Changing employee attitudes In the calm waters metaphor, change is seen as an occasional disruption in the normal flow of events. In the other metaphor, the organization is seen as a small raft navigating a raging river with uninterrupted white-water rapids. Aboard the raft are half-a-dozen people who have never worked together before, who are totally unfamiliar with the river, who are unsure of their eventual destination, and who, as if things weren’t bad enough, are traveling at night. In the whitewater rapids metaphor, change is normal and expected and managing it is a continual process. These two metaphors present very different approaches to understanding and responding to change. Let’s take a closer look at each one. THE CALM WATERS METAPHOR. At one time, the calm waters metaphor was fairly descriptive of the situation that managers faced. It’s best discussed using Kurt Lewin’s three-step change process.5 (See Exhibit 6-2.) According to Lewin, successful change can be planned and requires unfreezing the status quo, changing to a new state, and refreezing to make the change permanent. The status quo is considered equilibrium. To move away from this equilibrium, unfreezing is necessary. Unfreezing can be thought of as preparing for the needed change. It can be done by increasing the driving forces, which are forces pushing for change; by decreasing the restraining forces, which are forces that resist change; or by combining the two approaches. Once unfreezing is done, the change itself can be implemented. However, merely introducing change doesn’t ensure that it will take hold. The new situation needs to be refrozen so that it can be sustained over time. Unless this last step is done, there’s a strong chance that employees will revert back to the old equilibrium state—that is, the old ways of doing things. The objective of refreezing, then, is to stabilize the new situation by reinforcing the new behaviors. Lewin’s three-step process treats change as a move away from the organization’s current equilibrium state. It’s a calm waters scenario where an occasional disruption (a “storm”) means changing to deal with the disruption. Once the disruption has been dealt with, however, things can continue on under the new changed situation. This type of environment isn’t what most managers face today. EXHIBIT 6-2 Unfreezing Changing Refreezing The Three-Step Change Process 154 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES “Calm waters” or “white-water rapids”? Our company is definitely a “white-water rapids” environment. We strive to continually increase our rate of change by improving our team, the way we work, and our equipment so we can navigate the waters successfully. 6.2 LEARNING OUTCOME Classify types of organizational change. WHITE-WATER RAPIDS METAPHOR. Susan Whiting is CEO of Nielsen Media Research, the company best known for its television ratings, which are frequently used to determine how much advertisers pay for TV commercials. The media research business isn’t what it used to be, however, as the Internet, video on demand, cell phones, iPods, digital video recorders, and other changing technologies have made data collection much more challenging. Whiting says, “If you look at a typical week I have, it’s a combination of trying to lead a company in change in an industry in change.”6 That’s a pretty accurate description of what change is like in our second change metaphor—white-water rapids. It’s also consistent with a world that’s increasingly dominated by information, ideas, and knowledge.7 To get a feeling of what managing change might be like in a white-water rapids environment, consider attending a college that had the following rules: Courses vary in length. When you sign up, you don’t know how long a course will run. It might go for 2 weeks or 15 weeks. Furthermore, the instructor can end a course at any time with no prior warning. If that isn’t challenging enough, the length of the class changes each time it meets: Sometimes the class lasts 20 minutes; other times it runs for 3 hours. And the time of the next class meeting is set by the instructor during this class. There’s one more thing: All exams are unannounced, so you have to be ready for a test at any time. To succeed in this type of environment, you’d have to respond quickly to changing conditions. Students who are overly structured or uncomfortable with change wouldn’t succeed. Increasingly, managers are realizing that their job is much like what a student would face in such a college. The stability and predictability of the calm waters metaphor don’t exist. Disruptions in the status quo are not occasional and temporary, and they are not followed by a return to calm waters. Many managers never get out of the rapids. Like Susan Whiting, they face constant change. Is the white-water rapids metaphor an exaggeration? Probably not! Although you’d expect a chaotic and dynamic environment in high-tech industries, even organizations in nonhigh-tech industries are faced with constant change. Take the case of Swedish home appliance company Electrolux. You might think that the home appliances industry couldn’t be all that difficult—after all, most households need the products, which are fairly uncomplicated— but that impression would be wrong. Electrolux’s chief executive Hans Straberg has had several challenges to confront.8 First, there’s the challenge of developing products that will appeal to a wide range of global customers. Then, there’s the challenge of cheaper alternatives flooding the market. In addition, Electrolux faces intense competition in the United States, where it gets 40 percent of its sales. Because approximately 80 percent of the workforce in Sweden belongs to a labor union, companies certainly face expectations as far as how they treat their employees. However, Straberg recognized that his company was going to have to change if it was going to survive and prosper. One thing he did was to shift production to lower-cost facilities in Asia and Eastern Europe. Then, to better grasp what today’s consumers are thinking, the company held in-depth interviews with 160,000 customers from around the world. Using this information, a group of Electrolux employees gathered in Stockholm for a weeklong brainstorming session to search for insights on what hot new products to pursue. Finally, to make the new product development process speedier, Straberg eliminated the structural divisions between departments. Designers, engineers, and marketers have to work together to come up with ideas. These changes were essential if Electrolux wanted to survive the white-water rapids environment in which it operated. Today, any organization that treats change as the occasional disturbance in an otherwise calm and stable world runs a great risk. Too much is changing too fast for an organization or its managers to be complacent. It’s no longer business as usual. And managers must be ready to efficiently and effectively manage the changes facing their organization or their work area. Types of Organizational Change Managers at Verizon Wireless know what change is all about. “Even in an industry where rapid change is the status quo, it takes a special kind of company to handle the challenges posed by a major corporate acquisition and massive product rollout.”9 Verizon was up for the challenges and focused its change efforts on its people and processes. CHAPTER 6 | MANAGING CHANGE AND INNOVATION 155 What Is Organizational Change? Most managers, at one point or another, will have to change some things in their workplace. We classify these changes as organizational change, which is any alteration of people, structure, or technology. Organizational changes often need someone to act as a catalyst and assume the responsibility for managing the change process—that is, a change agent. Change agents can be a manager within the organization, but could be a nonmanager—for example, a change specialist from the HR department or even an outside consultant. For major changes, an organization often hires outside consultants to provide advice and assistance. Because they’re from the outside, they have an objective perspective that insiders may lack. But outside consultants have a limited understanding of the organization’s history, culture, operating procedures, and people. They’re also more likely to initiate drastic change than insiders would because they don’t have to live with the repercussions after the change is implemented. In contrast, internal managers may be more thoughtful, but possibly overcautious, because they must live with the consequences of their decisions. The hardest thing about change is establishing the right rate of change for the organization. You want to push the organization so it is changing as fast as possible, which is usually faster than people within the organization expect, but not push too fast otherwise the organization becomes dysfunctional. Types of Change Managers face three main types of change: structure, technology, and people (see Exhibit 6-3). Changing structure includes any change in structural variables such as reporting relationships, coordination mechanisms, employee empowerment, or job redesign. Changing technology encompasses modifications in the way work is performed or the methods and equipment that are used. Changing people refers to changes in attitudes, expectations, perceptions, and behavior of individuals or groups. CHANGING STRUCTURE. Changes in the external environment or in organizational strategies often lead to changes in the organizational structure. Because an organization’s structure is defined by how work gets done and who does it, managers can alter one or both of these structural components. For instance, departmental responsibilities could be combined, organizational levels eliminated, or the number of persons a manager supervises could be increased. More rules and procedures could be implemented to increase standardization. Or employees could be empowered to make decisions so decision making could be faster. EXHIBIT 6-3 Three Types of Change Structure Structural components and structural design Technology Work processes, methods, and equipment People Attitudes, expectations, perceptions, and behavior—individual and group organizational change change agent Any alteration of people, structure, or technology in an organization Someone who acts as a catalyst and assumes the responsibility for managing the change process 156 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES The Working World in 2020 Life-Long Learning of conditions, you’ll have to be able to adapt to take courses that are adapted to your specific needs and time schedule. In the same way that By 2020, the line between school and work will change. you brush your teeth daily, you’ll spend time each Technology will allow life-long learning to prohave blurred. The life span of most skills will be less than 10 years, requiring people to con- ceed without going to formal classes. Instead, day online, learning new skills that will allow you tinuously update their skills. Under these types training will take place via online learning. You’ll to maintain currency in your field. Another option would be to make major changes in the actual structural design. For instance, when Hewlett-Packard acquired Compaq Computer, product divisions were dropped, merged, or expanded. Structural design changes also might include, for instance, a shift from a functional to a product structure or the creation of a project structure design. Avery-Dennis Corporation, for example, revamped its structure to a new design that arranges work around teams. CHANGING TECHNOLOGY. Managers can also change the technology used to convert inputs into outputs. Most early management studies dealt with changing technology. For instance, scientific management techniques involved implementing changes that would increase production efficiency. Today, technological changes usually involve the introduction of new equipment, tools, or methods; automation; or computerization. Competitive factors or new innovations within an industry often require managers to introduce new equipment, tools, or operating methods. For example, coal mining companies in New South Wales updated operational methods, installed more efficient coal handling equipment, and made changes in work practices to be more productive. Automation is a technological change that replaces certain tasks done by people with tasks done by machines. Automation has been introduced in organizations such as the U.S. Postal Service where automatic mail sorters are used, and in automobile assembly lines, where robots are programmed to do jobs that workers used to perform. The most visible technological changes have come from computerization. Most organizations have sophisticated information systems. For instance, supermarkets and other retailers use scanners that provide instant inventory information. Also, most offices are computerized. At BP p.l.c., for example, employees had to learn how to deal with the personal visibility and accountability brought about by an enterprise-wide information system. The integrative nature of this system meant that what any employee did on his or her computer automatically affected other computer systems on the internal network.10 At the Benetton Group SpA, computers link its manufacturing plants outside Treviso, Italy, with the company’s various sales outlets and a highly automated warehouse. Now, product information can be transmitted and shared instantaneously, a real plus in today’s environment.11 CHANGING PEOPLE. Changing people involves changing attitudes, expectations, perceptions, and behaviors, something that’s not easy to do. Organizational development (OD) is the term used to describe change methods that focus on people and the nature and quality of interpersonal work relationships.12 The most popular OD techniques are described in Exhibit 6-4. Each seeks to bring about changes in the organization’s people and make them work together better. For example, executives at Scotiabank, one of Canada’s Big Five banks, knew that the success of a new customer sales and service strategy depended on changing employee attitudes and behaviors. Managers used different OD techniques during the strategic change including team building, survey feedback, and intergroup development. One indicator of how well these techniques worked in getting people to change was that every branch in Canada implemented the new strategy on or ahead of schedule.13 Much of what we know about OD practices has come from North American research. However, managers need to recognize that some techniques that work for U.S. organizations CHAPTER 6 | MANAGING CHANGE AND INNOVATION 157 EXHIBIT 6-4 Popular OD Techniques A method of changing behavior through unstructured group interaction. A technique for assessing attitudes and perceptions, identifying discrepancies in these, and resolving the differences by using survey information in feedback groups. Sensitivity Training Survey Feedback MORE EFFECTIVE INTERPERSONAL INT AL WORK RELATIONSHIPS RE S Process Consultation An outside consultant helps the manager understand how interpersonal processes are affecting the way work is being done. Activities that help team members learn how each member thinks and works. Team Building Intergroup Development Changing the attitudes, stereotypes, and perceptions that work groups have about each other. may not be appropriate for organizations or organizational divisions based in other countries.14 For instance, a study of OD interventions showed that “multirater [survey] feedback as practiced in the United States is not embraced in Taiwan” because the cultural value of “saving face is simply more powerful than the value of receiving feedback from subordinates.”15 What’s the lesson for managers? Before using the same OD techniques to implement behavioral changes, especially across different countries, managers need to be sure that they’ve taken into account cultural characteristics and whether the techniques “make sense for the local culture.” Changing technology allows physicians to visit patients online rather than at a doctor’s office or hospital emergency room. Advances in videoconferencing equipment, high-speed communication links by satellite, and more dependable Internet security are fueling the growth of interactive telemedicine businesses such as NuPhysicia, a start-up launched by Dr. Oscar Boultinghouse, an emergency medicine physician, and two colleagues. Dr. Boultinghouse is shown in this photo at his office in Houston talking to a patient who is a crane operator working on an oil rig in the South China Sea. Via two-way video, he used an electronic stethoscope that a paramedic on the rig held in place as part of diagnosing the patient’s illness. organizational development (OD) Change methods that focus on people and the nature and quality of interpersonal work relationships 158 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES LEARNING OUTCOME Explain how to manage resistance to change. 6.3 Managing Resistance to Change We know that it’s better for us to eat healthy and to be active, yet few of us follow that advice. We resist making changes in our lifestyle. Volkswagen Sweden and ad agency DDB Stockholm did an experiment to see if they could get people to change their behavior and take the healthier option of using the stairs instead of riding an escalator.16 How? They put a working piano keyboard on a stairway in a Stockholm subway station (you can see a video of it on YouTube) to see if commuters would use it. The experiment was a resounding success as stair traffic rose 66 percent. The lesson—people can change if you make the change appealing. Change can be a threat to people in an organization. Organizations can build up inertia that motivates people to resist changing their status quo, even though change might be beneficial. Why do people resist change and what can be done to minimize their resistance? Why Do People Resist Change? I manage resistance to change by communicating and making people understand “why” the change is required and “what-is-in-it-for-me.” It’s often said that most people hate any change that doesn’t jingle in their pockets. This resistance to change is well documented.17 Why do people resist change? The main reasons include uncertainty, habit, concern over personal loss, and the belief that the change is not in the organization’s best interest.18 Change replaces the known with uncertainty. No matter how much you may dislike attending college, at least you know what’s expected of you. When you leave college for the world of full-time employment, you’ll trade the known for the unknown. Employees in organizations are faced with similar uncertainty. For example, when quality control methods based on statistical models are introduced into manufacturing plants, many quality control inspectors have to learn the new methods. Some may fear that they will be unable to do so and may develop a negative attitude toward the change or behave poorly if required to use them. Another cause of resistance is that we do things out of habit. Every day when you go to school or work you probably go the same way, if you’re like most people. We’re creatures of habit. Life is complex enough—we don’t want to have to consider the full range of options for the hundreds of decisions we make every day. To cope with this complexity, we rely on habits or programmed responses. But when confronted with change, our tendency to respond in our accustomed ways becomes a source of resistance. The third cause of resistance is the fear of losing something already possessed. Change threatens the investment you’ve already made in the status quo. The more that people have invested in the current system, the more they resist change. Why? They fear the loss of status, money, authority, friendships, personal convenience, or other economic benefits that they value. This fear helps explain why older workers tend to resist change more than younger workers. Older employees generally have more invested in the current system and thus have more to lose by changing. A final cause of resistance is a person’s belief that the change is incompatible with the goals and interests of the organization. For instance, an employee who believes that a proposed new job procedure will reduce product quality can be expected to resist the change. This type of resistance actually can be beneficial to the organization if expressed in a positive way. Techniques for Reducing Resistance to Change When managers see resistance to change as dysfunctional, what can they do? Several strategies have been suggested in dealing with resistance to change. These approaches include education and communication, participation, facilitation and support, negotiation, manipulation and co-optation, and coercion. These tactics are summarized here and described in Exhibit 6-5. Managers should view these techniques as tools and use the most appropriate one depending on the type and source of the resistance. Education and communication can help reduce resistance to change by helping employees see the logic of the change effort. This technique, of course, assumes that much of the resistance lies in misinformation or poor communication. CHAPTER 6 | MANAGING CHANGE AND INNOVATION Technique When Used Advantage Disadvantage Education and communication When resistance is due to misinformation Clear up misunderstandings May not work when mutual trust and credibility are lacking Participation When resisters have the expertise to make a contribution Increase involvement and acceptance Time-consuming; has potential for a poor solution Facilitation and support When resisters are fearful and anxiety ridden Can facilitate needed adjustments Expensive; no guarantee of success Negotiation When resistance comes from a powerful group Can “buy” commitment Potentially high cost; opens doors for others to apply pressure too Manipulation and co-optation When a powerful group’s endorsement is needed Inexpensive, easy way to gain support Can backfire, causing change agent to lose credibility Coercion When a powerful group’s endorsement is needed Inexpensive, easy way to gain support May be illegal; may undermine change agent’s credibility 159 EXHIBIT 6-5 Techniques for Reducing Resistance to Change Participation involves bringing those individuals directly affected by the proposed change into the decision-making process. Their participation allows these individuals to express their feelings, increase the quality of the process, and increase employee commitment to the final decision. Facilitation and support involve helping employees deal with the fear and anxiety associated with the change effort. This help may include employee counseling, therapy, new skills training, or a short paid leave of absence. Negotiation involves exchanging something of value for an agreement to lessen the resistance to the change effort. This resistance technique may be quite useful when the resistance comes from a powerful source. Manipulation and co-optation refer to covert attempts to influence others about the change. It may involve distorting facts to make the change appear more attractive. Finally, coercion can be used to deal with resistance to change. Coercion involves the use of direct threats or force against the resisters. Contemporary Issues in Managing Change When CEO David Gray joined Daxko, a small software vendor based in Birmingham, Alabama, he wanted a more collegial workplace and he wanted to relieve employee stress. Now with a Wii console and a 52-inch plasma TV in the work/play lounge and an openoffice layout, the company’s “casual but driven environment now resembles Silicon Valley more than the Deep South.” One employee said, “It’s pretty intense here. Expectations for what I need to accomplish are clearly set. And if I can play the Wii while doing it, that’s even better.”19 Employee stress is one of the major critical concerns for managers today. In this section, we’re going to discuss stress and two other critical concerns—changing organizational culture and making change happen successfully. Let’s look first at changing culture. Changing Organizational Culture Korean Air CEO Cho Yang-Ho had a challenging change situation facing him. He wanted to transform his airline’s image of being an accident-prone airline from a developing country to that of a strong international competitor.20 His main focus was on improving safety above all else, which meant making significant changes to the organization’s culture. What made his task even more challenging was Korea’s hierarchical culture that teaches Koreans 6.4 LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss contemporary issues in managing change. 160 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES to be deferential toward their elders and superiors. Cho says, “It (the hierarchical culture) exists in all Oriental culture.” His approach to changing his company’s culture involved implementing a “systems approach aimed at minimizing the personality-driven, top-down culture that is a legacy of Korean business managers who place emphasis on intuition and responding to orders.” The cultural change must have worked. Korean Air is now the world’s largest commercial cargo carrier and it has earned a four-star rating (out of five possible stars) from a London aviation firm that rates airlines on quality. The fact that an organization’s culture is made up of relatively stable and permanent characteristics tends to make it very resistant to change.21 A culture takes a long time to form, and once established it tends to become entrenched. Strong cultures are particularly resistant to change because employees have become so committed to them. For instance, it didn’t take long for Lou Gerstner, who was CEO of IBM from 1993 to 2002, to discover the power of a strong culture. Gerstner, the first outsider to lead IBM, needed to overhaul the ailing, tradition-bound company if it was going to regain its role as the dominant player in the computer industry. However, accomplishing that feat in an organization that prided itself on its long-standing culture was Gerstner’s biggest challenge. He said, “I came to see in my decade at IBM that culture isn’t just one aspect of the game—it is the game.”22 Over time, if a certain culture becomes a handicap, a manager might be able to do little to change it, especially in the short run. Even under the most favorable conditions, cultural changes have to be viewed in years, not weeks or even months. UNDERSTANDING THE SITUATIONAL FACTORS. What “favorable conditions” facilitate cultural change? One is that a dramatic crisis occurs, such as an unexpected financial setback, the loss of a major customer, or a dramatic technological innovation by a competitor. Such a shock can weaken the status quo and make people start thinking about the relevance of the current culture. Another condition may be that leadership changes hands. New top leadership can provide an alternative set of key values and may be perceived as more capable of responding to the crisis than the old leaders were. Another is that the organization is young and small. The younger the organization, the less entrenched its culture. It’s easier for managers to communicate new values in a small organization than in a large one. Finally, the culture is weak. Weak cultures are more receptive to change than are strong ones.23 MAKING CHANGES IN CULTURE. If conditions are right, how do managers change culture? No single action is likely to have the impact necessary to change something ingrained and highly valued. Managers need a strategy for managing cultural change, as described in Exhibit 6-6. These suggestions focus on specific actions that managers can take. Following them, however, is no guarantee that the cultural change efforts will succeed. Organizational members don’t quickly let go of values that they understand and that have worked well for them in the past. Change, if it comes, will be slow. Also, managers must stay alert to protect against any return to old, familiar traditions. EXHIBIT 6-6 Changing Culture • Set the tone through management behavior; top managers, particularly, need to be positive role models. • Create new stories, symbols, and rituals to replace those currently in use. • Select, promote, and support employees who adopt the new values. • Redesign socialization processes to align with the new values. • To encourage acceptance of the new values, change the reward system. • Replace unwritten norms with clearly specified expectations. • Shake up current subcultures through job transfers, job rotation, and/or terminations. • Work to get consensus through employee participation and creating a climate with a high level of trust CHAPTER 6 | MANAGING CHANGE AND INNOVATION 161 Employee Stress “Most weekdays at 5:30 p.m., after putting in eight hours as an insurance agent in Lawrenceville, Georgia, April Hamby scurries about 100 yards to the Kroger supermarket two doors away. She’s not there to pick up some milk and bread, but instead to work an additional six hours as a cashier before driving home 35 miles and slipping into bed by 2 a.m. so she can get up at 7 a.m. and begin the grind anew.”24 And April’s situation isn’t all that unusual. During the economic downturn, many people found themselves working two or more jobs and battling stress.25 As a student, you’ve probably experienced stress—class projects, exams, even juggling a job and school. Then, there’s the stress associated with getting a decent job after graduation. But even after you’ve landed that job, stress isn’t likely to stop. For many employees, organizational change creates stress. An uncertain environment characterized by time pressures, increasing workloads, mergers, and restructuring has created a large number of employees who are overworked and stressed.26 In fact, depending on which survey you look at, the number of employees experiencing job stress in the United States ranges anywhere from 40 percent to 80 percent.27 However, workplace stress isn’t just an American problem. Global studies indicate that some 50 percent of workers surveyed in 16 European countries reported that stress and job responsibility have risen significantly over a five-year period; 35 percent of Canadian workers surveyed said they are under high job stress; in Australia, cases of occupational stress jumped 21 percent in a one-year period; more than 57 percent of Japanese employees suffer from work-related stress; some 83 percent of call-center workers in India suffer from sleeping disorders; and a study of stress in China showed that managers are experiencing more stress.28 Another interesting study found that stress was the leading cause of people quitting their jobs. Surprisingly, however, employers were clueless. They said that stress wasn’t even among the top five reasons why people leave and instead wrongly believed that insufficient pay was the main reason.29 WHAT IS STRESS? Stress is the adverse reaction people have to excessive pressure placed on them from extraordinary demands, constraints, or opportunities.30 Stress isn’t always bad. Although it’s often discussed in a negative context, stress can be positive, especially when it offers a potential gain. For instance, functional stress allows an athlete, stage performer, or employee to perform at his or her highest level at crucial times. However, stress is more often associated with constraints and demands. A constraint prevents you from doing what you desire; demands refer to the loss of something desired. When you take a test at school or have your annual performance review at work, you feel stress because you confront opportunity, constraints, and demands. A good performance review may lead to a promotion, greater responsibilities, and a higher salary. But a poor review may keep you from getting the promotion. An extremely poor review might lead to your being fired. One other thing to understand about stress is that just because the conditions are right for stress to surface doesn’t always mean it will. Two conditions are necessary for potential stress to become actual stress.31 First, there must be uncertainty over the outcome, and second, the outcome must be important. WHAT CAUSES STRESS? Stress can be caused by personal factors and by job-related factors called stressors. Clearly, change of any kind—personal or job-related—has the potential to cause stress because it can involve demands, constraints, or opportunities. stress stressors The adverse reaction people have to excessive pressure placed on them from extraordinary demands, constraints, or opportunities Factors that cause stress Providing a frustration venting room where factory workers can slam inflatable punching bags is one way that management of Foxconn Technology Group is helping its employees in China reduce personal and work-related stress. Because of severe labor shortages in China, Foxconn’s factory employees work long days and are under extreme pressure to produce products. Many employees are young migrant workers living away from their families and other support groups. Foxconn has also set up a help line and hired psychiatrists to assist lonely and depressed workers and has recruited singers, dancers, and gym trainers to teach all employees how to relax and relieve stress. 162 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES 32 Organizations have no shortage of factors that can cause stress. Pressures to avoid errors or by the numbers complete tasks in a limited time period, changes in the way reports are filed, a demanding 62 27 percent of Americans are stressed about work. 46 percent of individuals say they would give up some of their salary for more personal time. 50 percent or more of employee resistance to change could have been avoided with effective change management. 77 31 25 51 percent of managers say they work 41 to 60 hours a week. percent of businesses say the biggest hurdle to change is empowering others to act on the change. percent of managers believe that innovation happens by accident at their companies. percent of employees say their companies encourage innovation as a mandate. percent of employees say that their co-workers are the biggest source of stress at work. We ease employee stress by including them in planning for the change and driving the change. By including them, soliciting their feedback, and acting on their feedback, we increase the buy-in into the change process. supervisor, and unpleasant coworkers are a few examples. Let’s look at five categories of organizational stressors: task demands, role demands, interpersonal demands, organization structure, and organizational leadership. Task demands are factors related to an employee’s job. They include the design of a person’s job (autonomy, task variety, degree of automation), working conditions, and the physical work layout. Work quotas can put pressure on employees when their “outcomes” are perceived as excessive.33 The more interdependence between an employee’s tasks and the tasks of others, the greater the potential for stress. Autonomy, on the other hand, tends to lessen stress. Jobs in which temperatures, noise, or other working conditions are dangerous or undesirable can increase anxiety. So, too, can working in an overcrowded room or in a visible location where interruptions are constant. Role demands relate to pressures placed on an employee as a function of the particular role he or she plays in the organization. Role conflicts create expectations that may be hard to reconcile or satisfy. Role overload is experienced when the employee is expected to do more than time permits. Role ambiguity is created when role expectations are not clearly understood and the employee is not sure what he or she is to do. Interpersonal demands are pressures created by other employees. Lack of social support from colleagues and poor interpersonal relationships can cause considerable stress, especially among employees with a high social need. Organization structure can increase stress. Excessive rules and an employee’s lack of opportunity to participate in decisions that affect him or her are examples of structural variables that might be potential sources of stress. Organizational leadership represents the supervisory style of the organization’s managers. Some managers create a culture characterized by tension, fear, and anxiety. They establish unrealistic pressures to perform in the short run, impose excessively tight controls, and routinely fire employees who don’t measure up. This style of leadership filters down through the organization and affects all employees. Personal factors that can create stress include family issues, personal economic problems, and inherent personality characteristics. Because employees bring their personal problems to work with them, a full understanding of employee stress requires a manager to be understanding of these personal factors.34 Evidence also indicates that employees’ personalities have an effect on how susceptible they are to stress. The most commonly used labels for these personality traits are Type A and Type B. Type A personality is characterized by chronic feelings of a sense of time urgency, an excessive competitive drive, and difficulty accepting and enjoying leisure time. The opposite of Type A is Type B personality. Type Bs don’t suffer from time urgency or impatience. Until quite recently, it was believed that Type As were more likely to experience stress on and off the job. A closer analysis of the evidence, however, has produced new conclusions. Studies show that only the hostility and anger associated with Type A behavior are actually associated with the negative effects of stress. And Type Bs are just as susceptible to the same anxiety-producing elements. For managers, what is important is to recognize that Type A employees are more likely to show symptoms of stress, even if organizational and personal stressors are low. WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS OF STRESS? We see stress in a number of ways. For instance, an employee who is experiencing high stress may become depressed, accident prone, or argumentative; may have difficulty making routine decisions; may be easily distracted, and so on. As Exhibit 6-7 shows, stress symptoms can be grouped under three general categories: physical, psychological, and behavioral. All of these can significantly affect an employee’s work. In Japan, there’s a stress phenomenon called karoshi (pronounced kah-roe-she), which is translated literally as “death from overwork.” During the late 1980s, “several high-ranking Japanese executives still in their prime years suddenly died without any previous sign of illness.”35 As public concern increased, even the Japanese Ministry of Labor got involved, CHAPTER 6 | MANAGING CHANGE AND INNOVATION 163 EXHIBIT 6-7 Physical Symptoms of Stress Psychological SYMPTOMS SYMPTOMS OF STRESS Changes in metabolism, increased heart and breathing rates, raised blood pressure, headaches, and potential of heart attacks. Job-related dissatisfaction, tension, anxiety, irritability, boredom, and procrastination. Behavioral Changes in productivity, absenteeism, job turnover, changes in eating habits, increased smoking or consumption of alcohol, rapid speech, fidgeting, and sleep disorders. and it now publishes statistics on the number of karoshi deaths. As Japanese multinational companies expand operations to China, Korea, and Taiwan, it’s feared that the karoshi culture may follow. HOW CAN STRESS BE REDUCED? As mentioned earlier, not all stress is dysfunctional. Because stress can never be totally eliminated from a person’s life, managers want to reduce the stress that leads to dysfunctional work behavior. How? Through controlling certain organizational factors to reduce job-related stress, and to a more limited extent, offering help for personal stress. Things that managers can do in terms of job-related factors begin with employee selection. Managers need to make sure that an employee’s abilities match the job requirements. When employees are in over their heads, their stress levels are typically high. A realistic job preview during the selection process can minimize stress by reducing ambiguity over job expectations. Improved organizational communications will keep ambiguity-induced stress to a minimum. Similarly, a performance planning program such as MBO will clarify job responsibilities, provide clear performance goals, and reduce ambiguity through feedback. Job redesign is also a way to reduce stress. If stress can be traced to boredom or to work overload, jobs should be redesigned to increase challenge or to reduce the workload. Redesigns that increase opportunities for employees to participate in decisions and to gain social support also have been found to reduce stress.36 For instance, at U.K. pharmaceutical maker GlaxoSmithKline, a team-resilience program in which employees can shift assignments, depending on people’s workload and deadlines, has helped reduce work-related stress by 60 percent.37 Stress from an employee’s personal life raises two problems. First, it’s difficult for the manager to control directly. Second, ethical considerations include whether the manager has the right to intrude—even in the most subtle ways—in an employee’s personal life? If a manager believes it’s ethical and the employee is receptive, the manager might consider several approaches. Employee counseling can provide stress relief. Employees often want to talk to someone about their problems, and the organization—through its managers, inhouse human resource counselors, or free or low-cost outside professional help—can meet that need. Companies such as Citicorp, AT&T, and Johnson & Johnson provide extensive counseling services for their employees. A time management program can help employees whose personal lives suffer from a lack of planning to sort out their priorities.38 Still another role conflicts role ambiguity Type B personality Work expectations that are hard to satisfy When role expectations are not clearly understood People who are relaxed and easygoing and accept change easily role overload Having more work to accomplish than time permits Type A personality People who have a chronic sense of urgency and an excessive competitive drive 164 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES Because of its willingness to adapt to changing market conditions, UPS has evolved from its founding in 1907 as a private messenger and delivery service in Seattle to a global service provider that handles 15.1 million packages each day. As a changecapable organization, UPS considered future business expansion and factored it into management’s decision making for adding air service, entering the overnight air delivery business, and starting international air service. After receiving FAA authorization to operate its own aircraft, the company officially became an airline—UPS Airlines— with computerized operations systems for flight planning, scheduling, and load handling that can create optimum flight plans up to six years in advance. approach is organizationally sponsored wellness programs. For example, Wellmark Blue Cross Blue Shield of Des Moines, Iowa, offers employees an onsite health and fitness facility that is open six days a week. Employees at Cianbro, a general contracting company located in the northeastern United States, are provided a wellness program tailored to the unique demands of the construction environment.39 Making Change Happen Successfully Organizational change is an ongoing daily challenge facing managers in the United States and around the globe. In a global study of organizational changes in more than 2,000 organizations in Europe, Japan, the United States, and the United Kingdom, 82 percent of the respondents had implemented major information systems changes, 74 percent had created horizontal sharing of services and information, 65 percent had implemented flexible human resource practices, and 62 percent had decentralized operational decisions.40 Each of these major changes entailed numerous other changes in structure, technology, and people. When changes are needed, who makes them happen? Who manages them? Although you may think that it’s just top-level managers, actually managers at all organizational levels are involved in the change process. Even with the involvement of all levels of managers, change efforts don’t always work the way they should. In fact, a global study of organizational change concluded that “Hundreds of managers from scores of U.S. and European companies [are] satisfied with their operating prowess . . . [but] dissatisfied with their ability to implement change.”41 How can managers make change happen successfully? They can (1) make the organization change capable, (2) understand their own role in the process, and (3) give individual employees a role in the change process. Let’s look at each of these suggestions. In an industry where growth is slowing and competitors are becoming stronger, United Parcel Service (UPS) prospers. How? By embracing change! Managers spent a decade creating new worldwide logistics businesses because they anticipated slowing domestic shipping demand. They continue change efforts in order to exploit new opportunities.42 UPS is what we call a change-capable organization. What does it take to be a change-capable organization? Exhibit 6-8 summarizes the characteristics. The second component of making change happen successfully is for managers to recognize their own important role in the process. Managers can, and do, act as change agents. But their role in the change process includes more than being catalysts for change; they must also be change leaders. When organizational members resist change, it’s the manager’s responsibility to lead the change effort. But even when there’s no resistance to the change, someone has to assume leadership. That someone is managers. CHAPTER 6 | MANAGING CHANGE AND INNOVATION • Link the present and the future. Think of work as more than an extension of the past; think about future opportunities and issues and factor them into today’s decisions. • Make learning a way of life. Change-friendly organizations excel at knowledge sharing and management. • Actively support and encourage day-to-day improvements and changes. Successful change can come from the small changes as well as the big ones. • Ensure diverse teams. Diversity ensures that things won’t be done like they’ve always been done. • Encourage mavericks. Because their ideas and approaches are outside the mainstream, mavericks can help bring about radical change. • Shelter breakthroughs. Change-friendly organizations have found ways to protect those breakthrough ideas. • Integrate technology. Use technology to implement changes. • Build and deepen trust. People are more likely to support changes when the organization’s culture is trusting and managers have credibility and integrity. • Couple permanence with perpetual change. Because change is the only constant, companies need to figure out how to protect their core strengths during times of change. • Support an entrepreneurial mindset. Many younger employees bring a more entrepreneurial mindset to organizations and can serve as catalysts for radical change. 165 EXHIBIT 6-8 Change-Capable Organizations Sources: Based on S. Ante, “Change Is Good—So Get Used to It,” BusinessWeek, June 22, 2009, pp. 69–70; and P. A. McLagan, “The Change-Capable Organization,” T&D, January 2003, pp. 50–59. The final aspect of making change happen successfully revolves around getting all organizational members involved. Successful organizational change is not a one-person job. Individual employees are a powerful resource in identifying and addressing change issues. “If you develop a program for change and simply hand it to your people, saying, ‘Here, implement this,’ it’s unlikely to work. But when people help to build something, they will support it and make it work.”43 Managers need to encourage employees to be change agents—to look for those day-to-day improvements and changes that individuals and teams can make. For instance, a study of organizational change found that 77 percent of changes at the work group level were reactions to a specific, current problem or to a suggestion from someone outside the work group; and 68 percent of those changes occurred in the course of employees’ day-to-day work.44 Stimulating Innovation 6.5 45 “Innovation is the key to continued success.” “We innovate today to secure the future.” These two quotes (the first by Ajay Banga, the newly appointed CEO of MasterCard, and the second by Sophie Vandebroek, chief technology officer of Xerox Innovation Group) reflect how important innovation is to organizations. Success in business today demands innovation. In the dynamic, chaotic world of global competition, organizations must create new products and services and adopt state-of-the-art technology if they’re going to compete successfully.46 What companies come to mind when you think of successful innovators? Maybe it’s Apple with its iPad, iPhone, iPod, and wide array of computers. Maybe it’s Google with its continually evolving web platform. Google, for instance, is a good example of the new, faster face of innovation. The company runs 50 to 200 online search experiments with users at any given time. In one instance, Google asked selected users how many search results they’d like to see on a single screen. The reply from the users was more, many more. So Google ran an experiment that tripled the number of search results per screen to 30. The result: traffic declined because “it took about a third of a second longer for search results to appear—a seemingly insignificant delay that nonetheless upset many of the users.”47 Google tried something new and quickly found out it wasn’t something they wanted to pursue. Even Procter & Gamble, the global household and personal products giant, is doing the LEARNING OUTCOME Describe techniques for stimulating innovation. 166 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES EXHIBIT 6-9 Fast Company’s Top 10 List Bloomberg BusinessWeek’s Top 10 List World’s Most Innovative Companies Facebook Apple Amazon.com Google Apple Microsoft Google IBM Huawei Toyota Motor First Solar Amazon.com Pacific Gas &Electric LG Electronics Novartis BYD Walmart General Electric Hewlett-Packard Sony Sources: Fast Company Staff, “The World’s 50 Most Innovative Companies,” Fast Company, March 2010, pp. 52+; and M. Arndt and B. Einhorn, “The 50 Most Innovative Companies,” Bloomberg BusinessWeek, April 25, 2010, pp. 34–40. “vast majority of our concept testing online, which has created truly substantial savings in money and time,” according to the company’s global consumer and market knowledge officer.48 (See Exhibit 6-9 for a list of companies named as most innovative in the world.) What’s the secret to the success of these innovator champions? What can other managers do to make their organizations more innovative? In the following pages, we’ll try to answer those questions as we discuss the factors behind innovation. Creativity Versus Innovation Innovation is important because it is a necessity to survive in a global competitive environment. Companies must constantly innovate to be in front of and respond to market opportunities, competitive threats, and changes in the business environment. Creativity refers to the ability to combine ideas in a unique way or to make unusual associations between ideas.49 A creative organization develops unique ways of working or novel solutions to problems. But creativity by itself isn’t enough. The outcomes of the creative process need to be turned into useful products or work methods, which is defined as innovation. Thus, the innovative organization is characterized by its ability to channel creativity into useful outcomes. When managers talk about changing an organization to make it more creative, they usually mean they want to stimulate and nurture innovation. Stimulating and Nurturing Innovation The systems model can help us understand how organizations become more innovative.50 Getting the desired outputs (innovative products and work methods) involves transforming inputs. These inputs include creative people and groups within the organization. But having creative people isn’t enough. It takes the right environment to help transform those inputs into innovative products or work methods. This “right” environment—that is, an environment that stimulates innovation—includes three variables: the organization’s structure, culture, and human resource practices. (See Exhibit 6-10.) STRUCTURAL VARIABLES. When Carol Bartz joined Yahoo! Inc. as CEO, one of the first things she noticed was how the organization’s structure got in the way of innovation. Employees who wanted to try something different were unsure about whether they got to make the decision or somebody else did and what would happen if they went for it. Bartz’s philosophy was that “There’s a freedom when you organize around the idea that you’re clearly in charge and go for it.” Today, Yahoo!’s structure has been changed so that it provides clearer lines of responsibility and the freedom to make mistakes.51 An organization’s structure can have a huge impact on innovativeness. Research into the effect of structural variables on innovation shows five things.52 First, an organic-type structure CHAPTER 6 | MANAGING CHANGE AND INNOVATION EXHIBIT 6-10 Innovation Variables Structural Variables • Organic Structures • Abundant Resources • High Interunit Communication • Minimal Time Pressure • Work and Nonwork Support STIMULATE N INNOVATION Human Resource Variables • High Commitment to Training and Development • High Job Security • Creative People Cultural Variables • Acceptance of Ambiguity • Tolerance of the Impractical • Low External Controls • Tolerance of Risks • Tolerance of Conflict • Focus on Ends • Open-System Focus • Positive Feedback positively influences innovation. Because this structure is low in formalization, centralization, and work specialization, it facilitates the flexibility and sharing of ideas that are critical to innovation. Second, the availability of plentiful resources provides a key building block for innovation. With an abundance of resources, managers can afford to purchase innovations, can afford the cost of instituting innovations, and can absorb failures. For example, at Smart Balance Inc., the heart-healthy food developer uses its resources efficiently by focusing on product development and outsourcing almost everything else including manufacturing, product distribution, and sales. The company’s CEO says that this approach allows them to be “a pretty aggressive innovator” even during economic downturns.53 Third, frequent communication between organizational units helps break down barriers to innovation.54 Cross-functional teams, task forces, and other such organizational designs facilitate interaction across departmental lines and are widely used in innovative organizations. For instance, Pitney Bowes, the mail and documents company, uses an electronic meeting place called IdeaNet where its 35,000-plus employees can collaborate and provide comments and input on any idea they think will help create new sources of revenue, improve profitability, or add new value for customers. IdeaNet isn’t just an electronic suggestion box or open forum; employees are presented with specific idea challenges. A recent one involved how to expand its mail service business into new segments. Hundreds of employees from multiple functions and business units weighed in with ideas and eight promising ideas were generated.55 Fourth, innovative organizations try to minimize extreme time pressures on creative activities despite the demands of white-water rapids environments. Although time pressures may spur people to work harder and may make them feel more creative, studies show that it actually causes them to be less creative.56 Companies such as Google, 3M, and Hewlett-Packard actually urge staff researchers to spend a chunk of their workweek on self-initiated projects, even if those creativity innovation The ability to combine ideas in a unique way or to make unusual associations between ideas Taking creative ideas and turning them into useful products or work methods 167 168 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES Ratan Tata, chairman of both Tata Group and Tata Motors, has built one of the world’s largest conglomerates.59 When India’s longprotected economy was opened projects are outside the individual’s work area of expertise.57 Finally, studies have shown that an employee’s creative performance was enhanced when an organization’s structure explicitly supported creativity. Beneficial kinds of support included things like encouragement, open communication, readiness to listen, and useful feedback.58 in 1981, Tata decided that for his myriad companies to survive and thrive in a global economy, he had to “make innovation a priority and build it into the DNA of the Tata Group so that every employee at every company might think and act like an innovator.” One unique way innovation is encouraged at Tata is an internal innovation competition. Teams from units of the Indian conglomerate are presented with a challenge and prepare projects that are presented at the global finals at headquarters in Mumbai. Last year, 1,700 employee teams registered for the competition. The winners get no cash, only awards such as the Tata’s Promising Innovation Award or the Dare to Try Award. The real prize for employees is the respect and recognition of Tata’s leadership. However, the biggest winner is probably the company itself. idea champion Individuals who actively and enthusiastically support new ideas, build support, overcome resistance, and ensure that innovations are implemented CULTURAL VARIABLES. “Throw the bunny” is part of the lingo used by a product development team at toy company Mattel. It refers to a juggling lesson where team members learn to juggle two balls and a stuffed bunny. Most people easily learn to juggle two balls but can’t let go of that third object. Creativity, like juggling, is learning to let go—that is, to “throw the bunny.” And for Mattel, having a culture where people are encouraged to “throw the bunny” is important to its continued product innovations.60 Innovative organizations tend to have similar cultures.61 They encourage experimentation, reward both successes and failures, and celebrate mistakes. An innovative organization is likely to have the following characteristics. Accept ambiguity. Too much emphasis on objectivity and specificity constrains creativity. Tolerate the impractical. Individuals who offer impractical, even foolish, answers to what-if questions are not stifled. What at first seems impractical might lead to innovative solutions. Keep external controls minimal. Rules, regulations, policies, and similar organizational controls are kept to a minimum. Tolerate risk. Employees are encouraged to experiment without fear of consequences should they fail. Mistakes are treated as learning opportunities. You don’t want your employees to fear putting forth new ideas. A recent study found that one fear employees have is that their coworkers will think negatively of them if they try to come up with better ways of doing things. Another fear is that they’ll “provoke anger among others who are comfortable with the status quo.”62 In an innovative culture, such fears are not an issue. Tolerate conflict. Diversity of opinions is encouraged. Harmony and agreement between individuals or units are not assumed to be evidence of high performance. Focus on ends rather than means. Goals are made clear, and individuals are encouraged to consider alternative routes toward meeting the goals. Focusing on ends suggests that several right answers might be possible for any given problem. Use an open-system focus. Managers closely monitor the environment and respond to changes as they occur. For example, at Starbucks, product development depends on “inspiration field trips to view customers and trends.” Michelle Gass, now the company’s senior vice president of global strategy, “took her team to Paris, Düsseldorf, and London to visit local Starbucks and other restaurants to get a better sense of local cultures, behaviors, and fashions.” She says, “You come back just full of different ideas and different ways to think about things than you would had you read about it in a magazine or e-mail.”63 Provide positive feedback. Managers provide positive feedback, encouragement, and support so employees feel that their creative ideas receive attention. For instance, at CHAPTER 6 | MANAGING CHANGE AND INNOVATION 169 Research in Motion, Mike Lazaridis, president and co-CEO says, “I think we have a culture of innovation here, and [engineers] have absolute access to me. I live a life that tries to promote innovation.”64 Exhibit empowering leadership. Be a leader who lets organizational members know that the work they do is significant. Provide organizational members the opportunity to participate in decision making. Show them that you’re confident they can achieve high performance levels and outcomes. Being this type of leader will have a positive influence on creativity.65 HUMAN RESOURCE VARIABLES. In this category, we find that innovative organizations actively promote the training and development of their members so their knowledge remains current; offer their employees high job security to reduce the fear of getting fired for making mistakes; and encourage individuals to become idea champions, actively and enthusiastically supporting new ideas, building support, overcoming resistance, and ensuring that innovations are implemented. Research finds that idea champions have common personality characteristics: extremely high self-confidence, persistence, energy, and a tendency toward risk taking. They also display characteristics associated with dynamic leadership. They inspire and energize others with their vision of the potential of an innovation and through their strong personal conviction in their mission. They’re also good at gaining the commitment of others to support their mission. In addition, idea champions have jobs that provide considerable decision-making discretion. This autonomy helps them introduce and implement innovations in organizations.66 Let’s Get Real: What Would You Do? My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma, page 152 I would motivate the employees by invoking cultural icons that they readily recognize: (1) NASA employees are familiar with the concept of a strategic mission, e.g. “going to the moon”; and (2) United States is known for its entrepreneurial spirit. I would explain to the staff that this is not the end of an era but the beginning of a new and exciting era of commercialized space travel. Their experience with the space program gives them a unique position to capitalize on this next era. Their personal mission should be to continue to do their job to their best of their abilities while looking for entrepreneurial opportunities. I would then enable their personal mission by organizing business planning and management training at night, forums for investors and advanced technology companies to meet employees, and so on. One potential risk with this approach is that if the strategy is too successful, employees may want to leave early. To mitigate the risk, you can create a bonus plan to motivate people to stay until the end of the space shuttle program. Reginald Lo Vice President of Professional Services Third Sky, Inc. Alameda, CA 6 chapter r LEARNING OUTCOME 6.1 PREPARING FOR: Exams/Quizzes CHAPTER SUMMARY by Learning Outcomes Compare and contrast views on the change process. The calm waters metaphor suggests that change is an occasional disruption in the normal flow of events and can be planned and managed as it happens. In the white-water rapids metaphor, change is ongoing and managing it is a continual process. Lewin’s three-step model says change can be managed by unfreezing the status quo (old behaviors), changing to a new state, and refreezing the new behaviors. LEARNING OUTCOME 6.2 Classify types of organizational change. Organizational change is any alteration of people, structure, or technology. Making changes often requires a change agent to act as a catalyst and guide the change process. Changing structure involves any changes in structural components or structural design. Changing technology involves introducing new equipment, tools, or methods; automation; or computerization. Changing people involves changing attitudes, expectations, perceptions, and behaviors. LEARNING OUTCOME 6.3 Explain how to manage resistance to change. People resist change because of uncertainty, habit, concern over personal loss, and the belief that the change is not in the organization’s best interest. The techniques for reducing resistance to change include education and communication (educating employees about and communicating to them the need for the change), participation (allowing employees to participate in the change process), facilitation and support (giving employees the support they need to implement the change), negotiation (exchanging something of value to reduce resistance), manipulation and co-optation (using negative actions to influence), and coercion (using direct threats or force). LEARNING OUTCOME 6.4 Discuss contemporary issues in managing change. The shared values that comprise an organization’s culture are relatively stable, which makes it difficult to change. Managers can do so by being positive role models; creating new stories, symbols, and rituals; selecting, promoting, and supporting employees who adopt the new values; redesigning socialization processes; changing the reward system, clearly specifying expectations; shaking up current subcultures; and getting employees to participate in change. Stress is the adverse reaction people have to excessive pressure placed on them from extraordinary demands, constraints, or opportunities. To help employees deal with stress, managers can address job-related factors by making sure an employee’s abilities match the job requirements, improve organizational communications, use a performance planning program, or redesign jobs. Addressing personal stress factors is trickier, but managers could offer employee counseling, time management programs, and wellness programs. Making change happen successfully involves focusing on making the organization change capable, making sure managers understand their own role in the process, and giving individual employees a role in the process. 170 CHAPTER 6 | MANAGING CHANGE AND INNOVATION Describe techniques for stimulating innovation. LEARNING OUTCOME 6.5 Creativity is the ability to combine ideas in a unique way or to make unusual associations between ideas. Innovation is turning the outcomes of the creative process into useful products or work methods. Important structural variables include an organic-type structure, abundant resources, frequent communication between organizational units, minimal time pressure, and support. Important cultural variables include accepting ambiguity, tolerating the impractical, keeping external controls minimal, tolerating risk, tolerating conflict, focusing on ends not means, using an open-system focus, providing positive feedback, and being an empowering leader. Important human resource variables include high commitment to training and development, high job security, and encouraging individuals to be idea champions. 6.1 6.5 REVIEW AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. Contrast the calm waters and white-water rapids metaphors of change. 2. Explain Lewin’s three-step model of the change process. 3. Describe how managers might change structure, technology, and people. 4. Can a low-level employee be a change agent? Explain your answer. 5. Why do people resist change? How can resistance to change be reduced? 6. How are opportunities, constraints, and demands related to stress? Give an example of each. 7. Planned change is often thought to be the best approach to take in organizations. Can unplanned change ever be effective? Explain. 8. Organizations typically have limits to how much change they can absorb. As a manager, what signs would you look for that might suggest that your organization has exceeded its capacity to change? 9. Describe the structural, cultural, and human resources variables that are necessary for innovation. 10. Innovation requires allowing people to make mistakes. However, being wrong too many times can be disastrous to your career. Do you agree? Why or why not? What are the implications for nurturing innovation? ETHICS DILEMMA with stress. Employees don’t want to be perceived as being unable to handle the demands of their job. Although they may need stress management now more than ever, few employees want to admit that they’re stressed. What can be done about this paradox? Do organizations even have an ethical responsibility to help employees deal with stress? One in five companies offers some form of stress management program.67 Although these programs are available, many employees may choose not to participate. Why? Many employees are reluctant to ask for help, especially if a major source of that stress is job insecurity. After all, there’s still a stigma associated 171 172 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES SKILLS EXERCISE Developing Your Change Management Skill About the Skill Managers play an important role in organizational change. That is, they often serve as a catalyst for the change—a change agent. However, managers may find that change is resisted by employees. After all, change represents ambiguity and uncertainty, or it threatens the status quo. How can this resistance to change be effectively managed? Here are some suggestions.68 Steps in Practicing the Skill 1. Assess the climate for change. One major factor in why some changes succeed while others fail is the readiness for change. Assessing the climate for change involves asking several questions. The more affirmative answers you get, the more likely it is that change efforts will succeed. Here are some guiding questions: a. Is the sponsor of the change high enough in the organization to have power to effectively deal with resistance? b. Is senior management supportive of the change and committed to it? c. Do senior managers convey the need for change, and is this feeling shared by others in the organization? d. Do managers have a clear vision of how the future will look after the change? e. Are objective measures in place to evaluate the change effort, and have reward systems been explicitly designed to reinforce them? f. Is the specific change effort consistent with other changes going on in the organization? g. Are managers willing to sacrifice their personal selfinterests for the good of the organization as a whole? h. Do managers pride themselves on closely monitoring changes and actions by competitors? i. Are managers and employees rewarded for taking risks, being innovative, and looking for new and better solutions? j. Is the organizational structure flexible? k. Does communication flow both down and up in the organization? l. Has the organization successfully implemented changes in the past? m. Are employees satisfied with and do they trust management? n. Is a high degree of interaction and cooperation typical between organizational work units? o. Are decisions made quickly and do they take into account a wide variety of suggestions? 2. Choose an appropriate approach for managing the resistance to change. In this chapter, six strategies have been suggested for dealing with resistance to change— education and communication, participation, facilitation and support, negotiation, manipulation and co-optation, and coercion. Review Exhibit 6-5 (p. 159) for the advantages and disadvantages and when it is best to use each approach. 3. During the time the change is being implemented and after the change is completed, communicate with employees regarding what support you may be able to provide. Your employees need to know that you are there to support them during change efforts. Be prepared to offer the assistance that may be necessary to help them enact the change. Practicing the Skill Read through the following scenario. Write down some notes about how you would handle the situation described. Be sure to refer to the three suggestions for managing resistance to change. You’re the nursing supervisor at a community hospital employing both emergency room and floor nurses. Each of these teams of nurses tends to work almost exclusively with others doing the same job. In your professional reading, you’ve come across the concept of cross-training nursing teams and giving them more varied responsibilities, which in turn has been shown to improve patient care while lowering costs. You call the two team leaders, Sue and Scott, into your office to discuss your plan to have the nursing teams move to this approach. To your surprise, they’re both opposed to the idea. Sue says she and the other emergency room nurses feel they’re needed in the ER, where they fill the most vital role in the hospital. They work special hours when needed, do whatever tasks are required, and often work in difficult and stressful circumstances. They think the floor nurses have relatively easy jobs for the pay they receive. Scott, leader of the floor nurses team, tells you that his group believes the ER nurses lack the special training and extra experience that the floor nurses bring to the hospital. The floor nurses claim they have the heaviest responsibilities and do the most exacting work. Because they have ongoing contact with the patients and their families, they believe they shouldn’t be pulled away from vital floor duties to help ER nurses complete their tasks. Now . . . what would you do? CHAPTER 6 | MANAGING CHANGE AND INNOVATION WORKING TOGETHER Team Exercise It’s expected that by 2011 almost every country around the world already will be using or in the process of changing to International Financial Reporting Standards, also known as IFRS.69 In the United States where Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) have been the standard for decades, the move to IFRS will involve significant changes at both accounting services firms and other business firms who must now adhere to the new standards. Form teams of 3–4 people. Your team is responsible for planning how to proceed with this change at your accounting firm. What will need to be done to ensure that this conversion goes as smoothly as possible? Use the following two topic areas to guide you in planning this change for your professional CPA staff: (1) using communication channels to engage and inform employees, and (2) building needed skills and capabilities. Come up with a change plan that addresses each of these issues. MY TURN TO BE A MANAGER Take responsibility for your own future career path. Don’t depend on your employer to provide you with career development and training opportunities. Right now, sign up for things that will help you enhance your skills—workshops, seminars, continuing education courses, etc. Pay attention to how you handle change. Try to figure out why you resist certain changes and not others. Pay attention to how others around you handle change. When friends or family resist change, practice using different approaches to managing this resistance to change. When you find yourself experiencing dysfunctional stress, write down what’s causing the stress, what stress symptoms you’re exhibiting, and how you’re dealing with the stress. Keep this information in a journal and evaluate how well your stress reducers are working and how you could handle stress better. Your goal is to get to a point where you recognize that you’re stressed and can take positive actions to deal with the stress. Research information on how to be a more creative person. Write down suggestions in a bulleted-list format and be prepared to present your information in class. Is innovation more about (1) stopping something old, or (2) starting something new? Prepare arguments supporting or challenging each view. Choose two organizations that you’re familiar with and assess whether these organizations face a calm waters or white-water rapids environment. Write a short report describing these organizations and your assessment of the change environment each faces. Be sure to explain your choice of change environment. Steve’s and Mary’s recommended readings: C. S. Dawson, Leading Culture Change: What Every CEO Needs to Know (Stanford University Press, 2010); C. Heath and D. Heath, Switch: How to Change When Change Is Hard (Broadway Books, 2010); T. Brown, Change by Design: How Design Thinking Transforms Organizations and Inspires Creativity (HarperBusiness, 2009); D. K. Murray, Borrowing Brilliance: The Six Steps to Business Innovation by Building on the Ideas of Others (Gotham, 2009); Malcolm Gladwell, Blink (Little, Brown, 2005); Peter Senge et al., Presence (Doubleday, 2004); Tom Peters, Re-Imagine! (Dorling Kindersely, 2003); John P. Kotter and Dan S. Cohen, The Heart of Change (Harvard Business School Press, 2002); Malcolm Gladwell, The Tipping Point (Back Bay Books, 2002); Tom Kelley, The Art of Innovation (Doubleday, 2001); and Ian Morrison, The Second Curve (Ballantine Books, 1996). Choose an organization with which you’re familiar (employer, student organization, family business, etc.). Describe its culture (shared values and beliefs). Select two of those values/beliefs and describe how you would go about changing them. Put this information in a report. In your own words, write down three things you learned in this chapter about being a good manager. Self-knowledge can be a powerful learning tool. Go to mymanagementlab.com and complete these selfassessment exercises: How Well Do I Handle Ambiguity? How Creative Am I? How Well Do I Respond to Turbulent Change? How Stressed Is My Life? Am I Burned Out? Using the results of your assessments, identify personal strengths and weaknesses. What will you do to reinforce your strengths and improve your weaknesses? 173 174 PAR T TWO | INTEGRATIVE MANAGERIAL ISSUES CASE APPLICATION Too Big to Change? o one could have imagined it. After all these years, many N thought it was too big to fail. Yet, on June 1, 2009, General Motors Corporation (GM) filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, the second-largest industrial bankruptcy in history (WorldCom was the largest).70 GM, which hadn’t made a profit since 2004, declared in its filing that it had $172 billion in debt and $82 billion in assets. As any competent business student could tell you, that ratio doesn’t make a balance sheet balance, especially when the company’s equity is worth little. Fritz Henderson, who was named CEO of GM on March 30, 2009, was a numbers guy, but he knew the company’s culture had to change. His vision of the new organizational culture revolved around four guidelines: risk taking, accountability, speed, and customer-product focus. The problem was that GM’s former CEO Ed Whitacre celebrates with employees during his announcement that the company repaid its government loans in full and ahead of schedule as a result of management’s efforts to change GM’s bureaucratic culture. GM had tried before to reinvent itself, with mixed success. “GM’s past is littered with the buzzwords of culture change. . . . It has struggled to impose cultural change across the highly bureaucratic company in which brands, departments, and regions operated like self-governing and competing states within a federation.” But, GM’s executives said, this time would be different. After all, there was the bankruptcy and the selective elimination of entrenched leadership. Were things really changing, though? Despite his well-intentioned plans, Henderson was fired by the board on December 1, 2009. Some felt he wasn’t radical enough to change the company. His replacement was the person appointed by the Obama administration’s car czar to oversee the automaker’s revival after bankruptcy, Ed Whitacre, the well-respected retired chairman and CEO of AT&T. The challenges Whitacre faces in changing GM’s “plodding” culture are vast. A recent meeting of the CEO and other top executives illustrates why. The meeting was called to approve plans for a new generation of cars and trucks. Before the executives could go through all the pictures, charts, and financial projections they had prepared, Whitacre stopped them to ask why they were having the meeting in the first place. “Y’all have checked all this out pretty thoroughly. I imagine you’re not going to approve something that’s bad or unprofitable, so why don’t you make the final decisions?” He let the plans stand and suggested that the group disband its regular Friday sessions. And it’s not just the top executives who did this. In the past, even minor decisions were mulled over by committee after committee. Whitacre’s trying to change that. Pushing authority and decision making down into GM’s multilayered organization and slicing away at the bureaucracy are big parts of the cultural changes Whitacre is attempting. Changing GM’s entrenched corporate culture isn’t going to be easy, but it is necessary if GM is going to become the automotive icon it once was. With the changes Whitacre initiated, GM achieved profitability in the first two quarters of 2010. As was his intent all along, Whitacre stepped down as CEO in early August 2010 and was replaced by Daniel Akerson, a member of the company’s board of directors. Discussion Questions 1. How would you describe the organizational culture at GM? Why was decision making so slow—“plodding” as one analyst described it? 2. Why do you think the previous CEO’s (Mr. Henderson) attempts to change the organizational culture might have been lacking? 3. What changes is Mr. Whitacre making to the culture of GM? 4. What types of resistance is he likely to encounter? Using Exhibit 6-5, what would be the best ways to address that resistance? Be specific. CHAPTER 6 | MANAGING CHANGE AND INNOVATION CASE APPLICATION Stress Kills e know that too much stress can be bad for our health and well-being. That connection became even W more painfully and tragically obvious at France Télécom.71 Since early 2008, more than 40 people who worked for the company committed suicide. The situation captured the attention of the worldwide media, the public, and the French government because many of the suicides and more than a dozen failed suicide attempts have been attributed to work-related problems. Although France has a higher suicide rate than any other large Western country, this scenario is particularly troublesome. So much so, that the Paris prosecutor’s office opened an investigation of the company over accusations of psychological harassment. The judicial inquiry stems from a complaint by the union Solidares Unitaires Démocratiques against France Télécom’s former chief executive and two members of his top management team. The complaint accused management of conducting a “pathogenic restructuring.” Excerpts of the inspector’s report, although it’s not public, have been published in the French media. It describes a situation in which the company used various forms of psychological pressure in an effort to eliminate 22,000 jobs from 2006 to 2008. Company doctors alerted management about the possible psychological dangers of the stress that could accompany such drastic change. “The spate of suicides has highlighted a quirk at the heart of French society: Even with robust labor protection, workers see themselves as profoundly insecure in the face of globalization, with many complaining about being pushed beyond their limits.” A company lawyer denied that France Télécom had systematically pressured employees to leave. Company executives have realized that they need to take drastic measures to address the issue. One of the first changes was a new CEO, Stéphane Richard, who said his priority “would be to rebuild the morale of staff who have been through trauma, suffering and much worse.” The company halted some workplace practices identified as being particularly disruptive, like involuntary transfers, and began encouraging more supportive practices, including working from home. A company spokesperson says the company has completed two of six agreements with unions that cover a wide range of workplace issues such as mobility, work-life balance, and stress. Discussion Questions 1. What is your reaction to the situation described in this case? What factors, both inside the company and externally, appear to have contributed to this situation? 2. What appeared to be happening in the France Télécom’s workplace? What stress symptoms might have alerted managers to a problem? 3. Should managers be free to make decisions that are in the best interests of the company without worrying about employee reactions? Discuss. What are the implications for managing change? 4. What are France Télécom’s executives doing to address the situation? Do you think it’s enough? Are there other actions they might take? If so, describe those actions. If not, why not? 5. What could other companies and managers learn from this situation? 175 Meet the Manager Tiffany Eulinger Area Manager Buckle Kansas City, MO MY JOB: I am an area manager for the Buckle, and I work with medium and high-end fashion clothing products. I educate and train my teammates in various ways to present the product to the guest. At the Buckle, we have a free flow merchandise plan that allows us to market and merchandise the product in numerous ways. As a manager, I wear many different hats that include merchandising, hiring, interviewing, recruiting, training, and reviewing. BEST PART OF MY JOB: Fashion is always changing and evolving, which allows me to always change with it. Also, the Buckle treats me like an entrepreneur and allows me to make my own business decisions. They provide the product and the location for me. Plus, working in retail is fun. You are always interacting with the guest and your own teammates. I have been fortunate to see some of my management trainees move on and become store managers. It is really rewarding to see people grow with the company. Describe the eight steps in the decision-making process. page 178 Explain the four ways managers make decisions. page 182 Classify decisions and decisionmaking conditions. page 185 Describe different decision-making styles and discuss how biases affect decision making. page 190 Identify effective decision-making techniques. page 192 WORST PART OF MY JOB: There really is no bad part about working in retail. Sometimes the things you don’t find the most enjoyable are just part of the job. Finding the right people and motivating them to always strive to do their best would be one thing that is a struggle in the store. As a store manager, it is my job to be at the top of my game at all times. Sometimes other teammates need that motivation to get better, and they don’t always understand that they should be ready to work and make a difference the moment they clock in. BEST MANAGEMENT ADVICE EVER RECEIVED: “You can recruit yourself out of any situation.” This is the advice that always stays with me because in retail, people are always changing and sometimes when business isn’t where you need it to be, you might want to take a good look at the team. You just may have to hire new teammates who will help take your store to the next level. 177 A Manager’s Dilemma It is one of the most highly anticipated “revolutionary 360-degree theme park experience theme park entertainment experi- with a first-ever combination of live-action, ences ever, and it was created advanced robotic technology, and innovative film- around the characters, settings, and making.” The president of Universal Creative says, locations of one of the most popular “We have created an entirely new way to place book series in recent memory.1 The our guests into one of the most compelling stories seven-book Harry Potter series has of our time. What we have done will forever change sold more than 400 million copies and the theme park attraction experience.” has been translated into more than 67 Even though the Potter-themed attraction would languages. The movies have made seem to be a “slam-dunk proposition,” Thierry Coup, more than $5.3 billion. Now enter the Universal’s vice president for creative development, over-$200 million Wizarding World of recognizes that there’s no guarantee of success. Harry Potter at Universal Orlando What decision criteria might Thierry use to evaluate Resort, which opened in June 2010, the effectiveness of the decision to create this much to the delight of fans. attraction? The attraction was designed to be unlike any ever created. It’s a What Would You Do? Like managers everywhere, Thierry Coup needs to make decisions as he manages. Decision making is the essence of management. It’s what managers do (or try to avoid). And all managers would like to make good decisions because they’re judged on the outcomes of those decisions. In this chapter, we examine the concept of decision making and how managers make decisions. 7.1 LEARNING OUTCOME Describe the eight steps in the decision-making process. 178 The Decision-Making Process It was the type of day that airline managers dread. A record-setting blizzard was moving up the East Coast, covering roads, railroads, and airport runways with as much as 27 inches of snow. One of the major airlines that would have to deal with the storm, American Airlines, “has almost 80,000 employees who help make flights possible and four who cancel them.” Danny Burgin, who works at the company’s Fort Worth, Texas, control center, is one of those four. But fortunately for Danny, snowstorms are fairly simple to deal with because they’re usually “easier to predict and airline crews can work around them quickly with deicers and snowplows.” But still, even this doesn’t mean that the decisions he has to make are easy, especially when his decisions affect hundreds of flights and thousands of passengers!2 Although most decisions managers make don’t involve the weather, you can see that decisions play an important role in what an organization has to do or is able to do. Managers at all levels and in all areas of organizations make decisions. That is, they make choices. For instance, top-level managers make decisions about their organization’s goals, where to locate manufacturing facilities, or what new markets to move into. Middle and lower-level managers make decisions about production schedules, product quality problems, pay raises, and employee discipline. Making decisions isn’t something that just managers do; all organizational members make decisions that affect their jobs and the organization they work for. But our focus in this chapter is on how managers make decisions. Although decision making is typically described as choosing among alternatives, that view is too simplistic. Why? Because decision making is (and should be) a process, not just a simple act of choosing among alternatives.3 Even for something as straightforward as deciding where to go for lunch, you do more than just choose burgers or pizza. Granted, you may not spend a lot of time contemplating your lunch decision, but you still go through the process when making that decision. Exhibit 7-1 shows the eight steps in the decision-making process. This process is as relevant to personal decisions as it is to CHAPTER 7 | MANAGERS AS DECISION MAKERS EXHIBIT 7-1 Decision-Making Process Identifying a Problem "My sales reps need new computers!" • Memory and storage • Display quality • Battery life • Warranty • Carrying weight Identifying Decision Criteria Allocating Weights to the Criteria Memory and storage .................................10 Battery life.................................................... 8 Carrying weight........................................... 6 Warranty....................................................... 4 Display quality............................................. 3 Developing Alternatives HP ProBook Sony VAIO Lenovo IdeaPad Apple Macbook Toshiba Satellite Sony NW Dell Inspiron HP Pavilion Analyzing Alternatives HP ProBook Sony VAIO Lenovo IdeaPad Apple Macbook Toshiba Satellite Sony NW Dell Inspiron HP Pavilion Selecting an Alternative HP ProBook Sony VAIO Lenovo IdeaPad Apple Macbook Toshiba Satellite Sony NW Dell Inspiron HP Pavilion Implementing the Alternative Dell Inspiron Evaluating Decision Effectiveness corporate decisions. Let’s use an example—a manager deciding what laptop computers to purchase—to illustrate the steps in the process. Step 1: Identifying a Problem Your team is dysfunctional, your customers are leaving, or your plans are no longer relevant.4 Every decision starts with a problem, a discrepancy between an existing and a desired condition.5 Amanda is a sales manager whose reps need new laptops because their old ones are outdated and inadequate for doing their job. To make it simple, assume it’s not economical to add memory to the old computers and it’s the company’s policy to purchase, not lease. Now we have a problem—a disparity between the sales reps’ current computers (existing condition) and their need to have more efficient ones (desired condition). Amanda has a decision to make. How do managers identify problems? In the real world, most problems don’t come with neon signs flashing “problem.” When her reps started complaining about their computers, decision problem A choice among two or more alternatives An obstacle that makes it difficult to achieve a desired goal or purpose 179 180 PART THREE | PLANNING Decision making is an eight-step process that begins with identifying a problem and ends with evaluating the outcome of the decision. After problem identification, managers must determine the decision criteria that are relevant to solving the problem. For a manager looking for new laptops for her sales reps, the decision criteria may include price, display quality, memory and storage capabilities, battery life, and carrying weight. After the manager identifies the criteria, she must assign weights to the criteria if they aren’t equally important. it was pretty clear to Amanda that something needed to be done, but few problems are that obvious. Managers also have to be cautious not to confuse problems with symptoms of the problem. Is a 5 percent drop in sales a problem? Or are declining sales merely a symptom of the real problem, such as poor-quality products, high prices, or bad advertising? Also, keep in mind that problem identification is subjective. What one manager considers a problem might not be considered a problem by another manager. In addition, a manager who resolves the wrong problem perfectly is likely to perform just as poorly as the manager who doesn’t even recognize a problem and does nothing. As you can see, effectively identifying problems is important, but not easy.6 Step 2: Identifying Decision Criteria Once a manager has identified a problem, he or she must identify the decision criteria that are important or relevant to resolving the problem. Every decision maker has criteria guiding his or her decisions even if they’re not explicitly stated. In our example, Amanda decides after careful consideration that memory and storage capabilities, display quality, battery life, warranty, and carrying weight are the relevant criteria in her decision. Step 3: Allocating Weights to the Criteria If the relevant criteria aren’t equally important, the decision maker must weight the items in order to give them the correct priority in the decision. How? A simple way is to give the most important criterion a weight of 10 and then assign weights to the rest using that standard. Of course, you could use any number as the highest weight. The weighted criteria for our example are shown in Exhibit 7-2. EXHIBIT 7-2 Important Decision Criteria Memory and storage 10 Battery life 8 Carrying weight 6 Warranty 4 Display quality 3 CHAPTER 7 | MANAGERS AS DECISION MAKERS Memory and Storage Battery Life Carrying Weight Warranty Display Quality HP ProBook 10 3 10 8 5 Sony VAIO 8 7 7 8 7 Lenovo IdeaPad 8 5 7 10 10 Apple Macbook 8 7 7 8 7 Toshiba Satellite 7 8 7 8 7 Sony NW 8 3 6 10 8 Dell Inspiron 10 7 8 6 7 HP Pavilion 4 10 4 8 10 EXHIBIT 7-3 Possible Alternatives Step 4: Developing Alternatives The fourth step in the decision-making process requires the decision maker to list viable alternatives that could resolve the problem. In this step, a decision maker needs to be creative. And the alternatives are only listed, not evaluated just yet. Our sales manager, Amanda, identifies eight laptops as possible choices. (See Exhibit 7-3.) Step 5: Analyzing Alternatives Once alternatives have been identified, a decision maker must evaluate each one. How? By using the criteria established in Step 2. Exhibit 7-3 shows the assessed values that Amanda gave each alternative after doing some research on them. Keep in mind that these data represent an assessment of the eight alternatives using the decision criteria, but not the weighting. When you multiply each alternative by the assigned weight, you get the weighted alternatives as shown in Exhibit 7-4. The total score for each alternative, then, is the sum of its weighted criteria. Sometimes a decision maker might be able to skip this step. If one alternative scores highest on every criterion, you wouldn’t need to consider the weights because that alternative would already be the top choice. Or if the weights were all equal, you could evaluate an alternative merely by summing up the assessed values for each one. (Look again at Exhibit 7-3.) For example, the score for the HP ProBook would be 36 and the score for the Sony NW would be 35. EXHIBIT 7-4 Memory and Storage Battery Life Carrying Weight Warranty Display Quality Total HP ProBook 100 24 60 32 15 231 Sony VAIO 80 56 42 32 21 231 Lenovo IdeaPad 80 40 42 40 30 232 Apple Macbook 80 56 42 32 21 231 Toshiba Satellite 70 64 42 32 21 229 Sony NW 80 24 36 40 24 204 Dell Inspiron 100 56 48 24 21 249 HP Pavilion 40 80 24 32 30 206 decision criteria Criteria that define what’s important or relevant to resolving a problem Evaluation of Alternatives 181 182 PART THREE | PLANNING Step 6: Selecting an Alternative The sixth step in the decision-making process is choosing the best alternative or the one that generated the highest total in Step 5. In our example (Exhibit 7-4), Amanda would choose the Dell Inspiron because it scored higher than all other alternatives (249 total). Step 7: Implementing the Alternative In step 7 in the decision-making process, you put the decision into action by conveying it to those affected and getting their commitment to it. We know that if the people who must implement a decision participate in the process, they’re more likely to support it than if you just tell them what to do. Another thing managers may need to do during implementation is reassess the environment for any changes, especially if it’s a long-term decision. Are the criteria, alternatives, and choice still the best ones, or has the environment changed in such a way that we need to reevaluate? Step 8: Evaluating Decision Effectiveness The last step in the decision-making process involves evaluating the outcome or result of the decision to see whether the problem was resolved. If the evaluation shows that the problem still exists, then the manager needs to assess what went wrong. Was the problem incorrectly defined? Were errors made when evaluating alternatives? Was the right alternative selected but poorly implemented? The answers might lead you to redo an earlier step or might even require starting the whole process over. LEARNING OUTCOME Explain the four ways managers make decisions. 7.2 EXHIBIT 7-5 Decisions Managers May Make Managers Making Decisions Although everyone in an organization makes decisions, decision making is particularly important to managers. As Exhibit 7-5 shows, it’s part of all four managerial functions. In fact, that’s why we say that decision making is the essence of management.7 And that’s why managers—when they plan, organize, lead, and control—are called decision makers. Planning • • • • What are the organization’s long-term objectives? What strategies will best achieve those objectives? What should the organization’s short-term objectives be? How difficult should individual goals be? Organizing • • • • How many employees should I have report directly to me? How much centralization should there be in the organization? How should jobs be designed? When should the organization implement a different structure? Leading • • • • How do I handle employees who appear to be unmotivated? What is the most effective leadership style in a given situation? How will a specific change affect worker productivity? When is the right time to stimulate conflict? Controlling • • • • What activities in the organization need to be controlled? How should those activities be controlled? When is a performance deviation significant? What type of management information system should the organization have? CHAPTER 7 | MANAGERS AS DECISION MAKERS 183 The fact that almost everything a manager does involves making decisions doesn’t mean that decisions are always time-consuming, complex, or evident to an outside observer. Most decision making is routine. For instance, every day of the year you make a decision about what to eat for dinner. It’s no big deal. You’ve made the decision thousands of times before. It’s a pretty simple decision and can usually be handled quickly. It’s the type of decision you almost forget is a decision. And managers also make dozens of these routine decisions every day, such as, for example, which employee will work what shift next week, what information should be included in a report, or how to resolve a customer’s complaint. Keep in mind that even though a decision seems easy or has been faced by a manager a number of times before, it still is a decision. Let’s look at four perspectives on how managers make decisions. Making Decisions: Rationality When Hewlett-Packard (HP) acquired Compaq, the company did no research on how customers viewed Compaq products until “months after then-CEO Carly Fiorina publicly announced the deal and privately warned her top management team that she didn’t want to hear any dissent pertaining to the acquisition.”8 By the time they discovered that customers perceived Compaq products as inferior—just the opposite of what customers felt about HP products—it was too late. HP’s performance suffered and Fiorina lost her job. We assume that managers will use rational decision making; that is, they’ll make logical and consistent choices to maximize value.9 After all, managers have all sorts of tools and techniques to help them be rational decision makers. But as the HP example illustrates, managers aren’t always rational. What does it mean to be a “rational” decision maker? ASSUMPTIONS OF RATIONALITY. A rational decision maker would be fully objective and logical. The problem faced would be clear and unambiguous, and the decision maker would have a clear and specific goal and know all possible alternatives and consequences. Finally, making decisions rationally would consistently lead to selecting the alternative that maximizes the likelihood of achieving that goal. These assumptions apply to any decision—personal or managerial. However, for managerial decision making, we need to add one additional assumption—decisions are made in the best interests of the organization. These assumptions of rationality aren’t very realistic, but the next concept can help explain how most decisions get made in organizations. I make the best decisions by examining the situation and exploring all pros and cons. Then, I make a decision and stick to it because changing can be too confusing. A lot of time I talk over all scenarios with one of my assistants to work out the details. At the same time, I’m teaching that assistant to make wellthought-out decisions. Making Decisions: Bounded Rationality Despite the unrealistic assumptions, managers are expected to be rational when making decisions.10 They understand that “good” decision makers are supposed to do certain things and exhibit good decision-making behaviors as they identify problems, consider alternatives, gather information, and act decisively but prudently. When they do so, they show others that they’re competent and that their decisions are the result of intelligent deliberation. However, a more realistic approach to describing how managers make decisions is the concept of bounded rationality, which says that managers make decisions rationally, but are limited (bounded) by their ability to process information.11 Because they can’t possibly analyze all information on all alternatives, managers satisfice, rather than maximize. That is, they accept solutions that are “good enough.” They’re being rational within the limits (bounds) of their ability to process information. Let’s look at an example. Suppose that you’re a finance major and upon graduation you want a job, preferably as a personal financial planner, with a minimum salary of $35,000 and within a hundred miles of your hometown. You accept a job offer as a business credit analyst—not exactly a personal rational decision making bounded rationality satisfice Describes choices that are logical and consistent and maximize value Decision making that’s rational, but limited (bounded) by an individual’s ability to process information Accept solutions that are “good enough” 184 PART THREE | PLANNING Making good decisions is hard because every decision carries some sort of risk. You have to own the decision you are making and not go back on your thoughts. Make it and stick to it because if you change your mind too often, it can confuse your employees. financial planner but still in the finance field—at a bank 50 miles from home at a starting salary of $34,000. If you had done a more comprehensive job search, you would have discovered a job in personal financial planning at a trust company only 25 miles from your hometown and starting at a salary of $38,000. You weren’t a perfectly rational decision maker because you didn’t maximize your decision by searching all possible alternatives and then choosing the best. But because the first job offer was satisfactory (or “good enough”), you behaved in a bounded rationality manner by accepting it. Most decisions that managers make don’t fit the assumptions of perfect rationality, so they satisfice. However, keep in mind that their decision making is also likely influenced by the organization’s culture, internal politics, power considerations, and by a phenomenon called escalation of commitment, which is an increased commitment to a previous decision despite evidence that it may have been wrong.12 The Challenger space shuttle disaster is often used as an example of escalation of commitment. Decision makers chose to launch the shuttle that day even though the decision was questioned by several individuals who believed that it was a bad one. Why would decision makers escalate commitment to a bad decision? Because they don’t want to admit that their initial decision may have been flawed. Rather than search for new alternatives, they simply increase their commitment to the original solution. Making Decisions: The Role of Intuition When managers at stapler-maker Swingline saw the company’s market share declining, they used a logical scientific approach to address the issue. For three years, they exhaustively researched stapler users before deciding what new products to develop. However, at Accentra, Inc., founder Todd Moses used a more intuitive decision approach to come up with his line of unique PaperPro staplers.13 Like Todd Moses, managers often use their intuition to help their decision making. What is intuitive decision making? It’s making decisions on the basis of experience, feelings, and accumulated judgment. Researchers studying managers’ use of intuitive decision making have identified five different aspects of intuition, which are described in Exhibit 7-6.14 How common is intuitive decision making? One survey found that almost half of the executives surveyed “used intuition more often than formal analysis to run their companies.”15 EXHIBIT 7-6 What Is Intuition? Managers make decisions based on their past experiences Managers make decisions based on ethical values or culture Managers make decisions based on feelings or emotions Experience-based decisions Values or ethicsbased decisions Affect-initiated decisions Intuition Subconscious mental processing Managers use data from subconscious mind to help them make decisions Cognitive-based decisions Managers make decisions based on skills, knowledge, and training Source: Based on L. A. Burke and M. K. Miller, “Taking the Mystery Out of Intuitive Decision Making,” Academy of Management Executive, October 1999, pp. 91–99. CHAPTER 7 | MANAGERS AS DECISION MAKERS 185 Intuitive decision making can complement both rational and bounded rational decision making.16 First of all, a manager who has had experience with a similar type of problem or situation often can act quickly with what appears to be limited information because of that past experience. In addition, a recent study found that individuals who experienced intense feelings and emotions when making decisions actually achieved higher decision-making performance, especially when they understood their feelings as they were making decisions. The old belief that managers should ignore emotions when making decisions may not be the best advice.17 Making Decisions: The Role of Evidence-Based Management Suppose you were exhibiting some strange, puzzling physical symptoms. In order to make the best decisions about proper diagnosis and treatment, wouldn’t you want your doctor to base her decisions on the best available evidence? Now suppose that you’re a manager faced with putting together an employee recognition program. Wouldn’t you want those decisions also to be based on the best available evidence? “Any decisionmaking process is likely to be enhanced through the use of relevant and reliable evidence, whether it’s buying someone a birthday present or wondering which new washing machine to buy.”18 That’s the premise behind evidence-based management (EBMgt), which is the “systematic use of the best available evidence to improve management practice.”19 EBMgt is quite relevant to managerial decision making. The four essential elements of EBMgt are the decision maker’s expertise and judgment; external evidence that’s been evaluated by the decision maker; opinions, preferences, and values of those who have a stake in the decision; and relevant organizational (internal) factors such as context, circumstances, and organizational members. The strength or influence of each of these elements on a decision will vary with each decision. Sometimes, the decision maker’s intuition (judgment) might be given greater emphasis in the decision; other times it might be the opinions of stakeholders; and at other times, it might be ethical considerations (organizational context). The key for managers is to recognize and understand the mindful, conscious choice as to which element(s) are most important and should be emphasized in making a decision. Types of Decisions and Decision-Making Conditions Restaurant managers in New York City make routine decisions weekly about purchasing food supplies and scheduling employee work shifts. It’s something they’ve done numerous times. But now they’re facing a different kind of decision—one they’ve never encountered— how to adapt to the new law requiring that nutritional information be posted. 7.3 LEARNING OUTCOME Classify decisions and decision-making conditions. Types of Decisions Such situations aren’t all that unusual. Managers in all kinds of organizations face different types of problems and decisions as they do their jobs. Depending on the nature of the problem, a manager can use one of two different types of decisions. STRUCTURED PROBLEMS AND PROGRAMMED DECISIONS. Some problems are straightforward. The decision maker’s goal is clear, the problem is familiar, and information about the problem is easily defined and complete. Examples might include when a escalation of commitment intuitive decision making An increased commitment to a previous decision despite evidence it may have been wrong Making decisions on the basis of experience, feelings, and accumulated judgment evidence-based management (EBMgt) The systematic use of the best available evidence to improve management practice 186 PART THREE | PLANNING customer returns a purchase to a store, when a supplier is late with an important delivery, a news team’s response to a fast-breaking event, or a college’s handling of a student wanting to drop a class. Such situations are called structured problems because they’re straightforward, familiar, and easily defined. For instance, a server spills a drink on a customer’s coat. The customer is upset and the manager needs to do something. Because it’s not an unusual occurrence, there’s probably some standardized routine for handling it. For example, the manager offers to have the coat cleaned at the restaurant’s expense. This is what we call a programmed decision, a repetitive decision that can be handled by a routine approach. Because the problem is structured, the manager doesn’t have to go to the trouble and expense of going through an involved decision process. The “develop-the-alternatives” stage of the decision-making process either doesn’t exist or is given little attention. Why? Because once the structured problem is defined, the solution is usually self-evident or at least reduced to a few alternatives that are familiar and have proved successful in the past. The spilled drink on the customer’s coat doesn’t require the restaurant manager to identify and weight decision criteria or to develop a long list of possible solutions. Instead, the manager relies on one of three types of programmed decisions: procedure, rule, or policy. A procedure is a series of sequential steps a manager uses to respond to a structured problem. The only difficulty is identifying the problem. Once it’s clear, so is the procedure. For instance, a purchasing manager receives a request from a warehouse manager for 15 PDA handhelds for the inventory clerks. The purchasing manager knows how to make this decision by following the established purchasing procedure. A rule is an explicit statement that tells a manager what can or cannot be done. Rules are frequently used because they’re simple to follow and ensure consistency. For example, rules about lateness and absenteeism permit supervisors to make disciplinary decisions rapidly and fairly. The third type of programmed decisions is a policy, which is a guideline for making a decision. In contrast to a rule, a policy establishes general parameters for the decision maker rather than specifically stating what should or should not be done. Policies typically contain an ambiguous term that leaves interpretation up to the decision maker. Here are some sample policy statements: The customer always comes first and should always be satisfied. We promote from within, whenever possible. Employee wages shall be competitive within community standards. Notice that the terms satisfied, whenever possible, and competitive require interpretation. For instance, the policy of paying competitive wages doesn’t tell a company’s human resources manager the exact amount he or she should pay, but it does guide them in making the decision. UNSTRUCTURED PROBLEMS AND NONPROGRAMMED DECISIONS. Not all the problems managers face can be solved using programmed decisions. Many organizational situations involve unstructured problems, which are problems that are new or unusual and for which information is ambiguous or incomplete. Whether to build a new manufacturing facility in China is an example of an unstructured problem. So, too, is the problem facing restaurant managers in New York City who must decide how to modify their businesses to comply with the new law. When problems are unstructured, managers must rely on nonprogrammed decision making in order to develop unique solutions. Nonprogrammed decisions are unique and nonrecurring and involve custom-made solutions. Exhibit 7-7 describes the differences between programmed and nonprogrammed decisions. Lower-level managers mostly rely on programmed decisions (procedures, rules, and policies) because they confront familiar and repetitive problems. As managers move up the organizational hierarchy, the problems they confront become more unstructured. Why? Because lower-level managers handle the routine decisions and let upper-level managers deal with the unusual or difficult decisions. Also, upper-level managers delegate routine decisions to their subordinates so they can deal with more difficult issues.20 Thus, few managerial decisions in the real world are either fully programmed or nonprogrammed. Most fall somewhere in between. CHAPTER 7 | MANAGERS AS DECISION MAKERS Characteristic Programmed Decisions Nonprogrammed Decisions EXHIBIT 7-7 Type of problem Structured Unstructured Programmed Versus Nonprogrammed Decisions Managerial level Lower levels Upper levels Frequency Repetitive, routine New, unusual Information Readily available Ambiguous or incomplete Goals Clear, specific Vague Time frame for solution Short Relatively long Solution relies on . . . Procedures, rules, policies Judgment and creativity 187 Decision-Making Conditions When making decisions, managers may face three different conditions: certainty, risk, and uncertainty. Let’s look at the characteristics of each. CERTAINTY. The ideal situation for making decisions is one of certainty, which is a situation where a manager can make accurate decisions because the outcome of every alternative is known. For example, when North Dakota’s state treasurer decides where to deposit excess state funds, he knows exactly the interest rate being offered by each bank and the amount that will be earned on the funds. He is certain about the outcomes of each alternative. As you might expect, most managerial decisions aren’t like this. RISK. A far more common situation is one of risk, conditions in which the decision maker is able to estimate the likelihood of certain outcomes. Under risk, managers have historical data from past personal experiences or secondary information that lets them assign probabilities to different alternatives. Let’s do an example. The Working World in 2020 rtificial intelligence software will be A Just as today’s computers allow you to medical kiosk, possibly at their neighborhood available to approach problems the way access information quickly from sources such as drugstore, and from answers that the patient the human brain does—by trying to rec- spreadsheets or search engines, most of the rou- provides, the computer will render a decision. ognize patterns that underlie a complex set of tine decisions that employees now do on the job Similarly many hiring decisions will be made data.21 Like people, this software will “learn” to are likely to be delegated to a software program. by software that is programmed to simulate the pick out subtle patterns. In so doing, it will be For instance, much of the diagnostic work now successful decision processes used by recruiters able to perform a number of decision-making done by doctors will be done by software. Patients and managers. Welcome to the future of decision tasks. will describe their symptoms to a computer in a making! structured problems rule nonprogrammed decisions Straightforward, familiar, and easily defined problems An explicit statement that tells managers what can or cannot be done Unique and nonrecurring decisions that require a custom-made solution programmed decision policy certainty A repetitive decision that can be handled by a routine approach A guideline for making decisions procedure Problems that are new or unusual and for which information is ambiguous or incomplete A situation in which a manager can make accurate decisions because all outcomes are known A series of sequential steps used to respond to a well-structured problem unstructured problems risk A situation in which the decision maker is able to estimate the likelihood of certain outcomes 188 PART THREE | PLANNING EXHIBIT 7-8 Expected Value Event Expected Revenues Heavy snowfall $850,000 0.3 $255,000 Normal snowfall 725,000 0.5 362,500 Light snowfall 350,000 0.2 x Probability = Expected Value of Each Alternative 70,000 $687,500 Suppose that you manage a Colorado ski resort and you’re thinking about adding another lift. Obviously, your decision will be influenced by the additional revenue that the new lift would generate, which depends on snowfall. You have fairly reliable weather data from the last 10 years on snowfall levels in your area—three years of heavy snowfall, five years of normal snowfall, and two years of light snow. And you have good information on the amount of revenues generated during each level of snow. You can use this information to help you make your decision by calculating expected value—the expected return from each possible outcome—by multiplying expected revenues by snowfall probabilities. The result is the average revenue you can expect over time if the given probabilities hold. As Exhibit 7-8 shows, the expected revenue from adding a new ski lift is $687,500. Of course, whether that’s enough to justify a decision to build depends on the costs involved in generating that revenue. UNCERTAINTY. What happens if you face a decision where you’re not certain about the outcomes and can’t even make reasonable probability estimates? We call this condition uncertainty. Managers do face decision-making situations of uncertainty. Under these conditions, the choice of alternative is influenced by the limited amount of available information and by the psychological orientation of the decision maker. An optimistic manager will follow a maximax choice (maximizing the maximum possible payoff); a pessimist will follow a maximin choice (maximizing the minimum possible payoff); and a manager who desires to minimize his maximum “regret” will opt for a minimax choice. Let’s look at these different choice approaches using an example. A marketing manager at Visa has determined four possible strategies (S1, S2, S3, and S4) for promoting the Visa card throughout the West Coast region of the United States. The marketing manager also knows that major competitor MasterCard has three competitive Influenced by his optimism and intuition, Richard Branson (left), founder of The Virgin Group, unveiled a new online gaming venture based on his hunch that gamers want something new, interactive, and fun. A convergence of video games, social networking, and competitive gaming, Virgin Gaming enables players from around the world to meet and challenge each other in matches for cash and prizes. Although launched during a time of global economic uncertainty, Branson sees an enormous potential of an online community of 40 million daily users. Unlike competitors that target professionals, Virgin Gaming is designed for gamers of all skill levels. Shown here with Branson are (from left) Virgin Gaming president and cofounder William Levy, vice president of gaming operations, and cofounder Zack Zeldin, and CEO Rob Segal. CHAPTER 7 | MANAGERS AS DECISION MAKERS Visa Marketing Strategy (in millions of dollars) MasterCard’s Competitive Action CA1 CA2 CA3 S1 S2 13 14 11 9 15 18 S3 24 21 15 S4 18 14 28 189 EXHIBIT 7-9 Payoff Matrix actions (CA1, CA2, CA3) it’s using to promote its card in the same region. For this example, we’ll assume that the Visa manager had no previous knowledge that would allow her to determine probabilities of success of any of the four strategies. She formulates the matrix shown in Exhibit 7-9 to show the various Visa strategies and the resulting profit depending on the competitive action used by MasterCard. In this example, if our Visa manager is an optimist, she’ll choose strategy 4 (S4) because that could produce the largest possible gain: $28 million. Note that this choice maximizes the maximum possible gain (maximax choice). If our manager is a pessimist, she’ll assume that only the worst can occur. The worst outcome for each strategy is as follows: S1 = $11 million; S2 = $9 million; S3 = $15 million; S4 = $14 million. These are the most pessimistic outcomes from each strategy. Following the maximin choice, she would maximize the minimum payoff; in other words, she’d select S3 ($15 million is the largest of the minimum payoffs). In the third approach, managers recognize that once a decision is made, it will not necessarily result in the most profitable payoff. There may be a “regret” of profits given up—regret referring to the amount of money that could have been made had a different strategy been used. ManAs a business owner in Russia, agers calculate regret by subtracting all possible payoffs Mikhail D. Prokhorov has had to in each category from the maximum possible payoff for make a lot of risky decisions.22 each given event, in this case for each competitive action. He’s president of Onexim Group, a For our Visa manager, the highest payoff, given that MasterCard engages in CA1, CA2, or CA3, is $24 million, company with businesses in $21 million, or $28 million, respectively (the highest metal, gold, and real estate. And number in each column). Subtracting the payoffs in he’s worth an estimated $17.9 Exhibit 7-9 from those figures produces the results billion. He says, “Doing business in shown in Exhibit 7-10. The maximum regrets are S1 = $17 million, S2 = $15 Russia in the early 1990s was million, S3 = $13 million, and S4 = $7 million. The cowboy territory with no sheriff.” minimax choice minimizes the maximum regret, so our That’s an interesting and probably Visa manager would choose S4. By making this choice, fairly accurate description of risk. And it’s a good thing he’s comfortable with she’ll never have a regret of profits given up of more than $7 million. This result contrasts, for example, with a regret risk because he’s now made another risky decision, this time in the United States. of $15 million had she chosen S2 and MasterCard had He’s become an NBA league owner. As the new majority owner of the New taken CA1. Jersey Nets, he says “I am real excited to take the worst team of the league and Although managers try to quantify a decision when turn it into the best.” The basketball-loving Russian billionaire hopes his latest possible by using payoff and regret matrices, uncertainty often forces them to rely more on intuition, creativity, decision is a slam dunk! hunches, and “gut feel.” uncertainty A situation in which a decision maker has neither certainty nor reasonable probability estimates available 190 PART THREE | PLANNING EXHIBIT 7-10 Regret Matrix (in millions of dollars) Visa Marketing Strategy 7.4 LEARNING OUTCOME Describe different decisionmaking styles and discuss how biases affect decision making. MasterCard’s Competitive Action CA1 CA2 CA3 S1 S2 11 7 17 15 6 10 S3 0 0 13 S4 6 7 0 Decision-Making Styles William D. Perez’s tenure as Nike’s CEO lasted a short and turbulent 13 months. Analysts attributed his abrupt dismissal to a difference in decision-making approaches between him and Nike co-founder Phil Knight. Perez tended to rely more on data and facts when making decisions, whereas Knight highly valued, and had always used, his judgment and feelings to make decisions.23 As this example clearly shows, managers have different styles when it comes to making decisions. Linear–Nonlinear Thinking Style Profile Good decision-making skills include not acting too fast, but actually evaluating all pros and cons, then writing it out or walking through it to get the right decision made. Talking it out with other assistants or teammates is helpful too because you they might be able to provide a different perspective. When you are the manager, you are expected to make the decision . . . so you need to be assertive. Suppose that you’re a new manager. How will you make decisions? Recent research done with four distinct groups of people says that the way a person approaches decision making is likely affected by his or her thinking style.24 Your thinking style reflects two things: (1) the source of information you tend to use (external data and facts OR internal sources such as feelings and intuition), and (2) whether you process that information in a linear way (rational, logical, analytical) OR a nonlinear way (intuitive, creative, insightful). These four dimensions are collapsed into two styles. The first, linear thinking style, is characterized by a person’s preference for using external data and facts and processing this information through rational, logical thinking to guide decisions and actions. The second, nonlinear thinking style, is characterized by a preference for internal sources of information (feelings and intuition) and processing this information with internal insights, feelings, and hunches to guide decisions and actions. Look back at the earlier Nike example and you’ll see both styles described. Managers need to recognize that their employees may use different decision-making styles. Some employees may take their time weighing alternatives and relying on how they feel about it while others rely on external data before logically making a decision. These differences don’t make one person’s approach better than the other. It just means that their decision making styles are different. Decision-Making Biases and Errors When managers make decisions, they not only use their own particular style, they may use “rules of thumb,” or heuristics, to simplify their decision making. Rules of thumb can be useful because they help make sense of complex, uncertain, and ambiguous information.25 Even though managers may use rules of thumb, that doesn’t mean those rules are reliable. Why? Because they may lead to errors and biases in processing and evaluating information. Exhibit 7-11 identifies twelve common decision errors and biases that managers make. Let’s look at each.26 When decision makers tend to think they know more than they do or hold unrealistically positive views of themselves and their performance, they’re exhibiting the overconfidence bias. The immediate gratification bias describes decision makers who tend to want immediate rewards and to avoid immediate costs. For these individuals, decision choices that provide quick payoffs are more appealing than those with payoffs in the future. The anchoring effect describes how decision makers fixate on initial information as a CHAPTER 7 | MANAGERS AS DECISION MAKERS EXHIBIT Immediate Gratification Anchoring Effect Self-serving Sunk Costs 7-11 Common Decision-Making Biases Overconfidence Hindsight 191 Decision-Making Errors and Biases Selective Perception Confirmation Randomness Framing Representation Availability starting point and then, once set, fail to adequately adjust for subsequent information. First impressions, ideas, prices, and estimates carry unwarranted weight relative to information received later. When decision makers selectively organize and interpret events based on their biased perceptions, they’re using the selective perception bias. This influences the information they pay attention to, the problems they identify, and the alternatives they develop. Decision makers who seek out information that reaffirms their past choices and discount information that contradicts past judgments exhibit the confirmation bias. These people tend to accept at face value information that confirms their preconceived views and are critical and skeptical of information that challenges these views. The framing bias is when decision makers select and highlight certain aspects of a situation while excluding others. By drawing attention to specific aspects of a situation and highlighting them, while at the same time downplaying or omitting other aspects, they distort what they see and create incorrect reference points. The availability bias happens when decisions makers tend to remember events that are the most recent and vivid in their memory. The result? It distorts their ability to recall events in an objective manner and results in distorted judgments and probability estimates. When decision makers assess the likelihood of an event based on how closely it resembles other events or sets of events, that’s the representation bias. Managers exhibiting this bias draw analogies and see identical situations where they don’t exist. The randomness bias describes the actions of decision makers who try to create meaning out of random events. They do this because most decision makers have difficulty dealing with chance even though random events happen to everyone and there’s nothing that can be done to predict them. The sunk costs error occurs when decision makers forget that current choices can’t correct the past. They incorrectly fixate on past expenditures of time, money, or effort in assessing choices rather than on future consequences. Instead of ignoring sunk costs, they can’t forget them. Decision makers who are quick to take credit for their successes and to blame failure on outside factors are exhibiting the self-serving bias. Finally, the hindsight bias is the tendency for decision makers to falsely believe that they would have accurately predicted the outcome of an event once that outcome is actually known. linear thinking style nonlinear thinking style heuristics Decision style characterized by a person’s preference for using external data and facts and processing this information through rational, logical thinking Decision style characterized by a person’s preference for internal sources of information and processing this information with internal insights, feelings, and hunches Rules of thumb that managers use to simplify decision making 192 PART THREE | PLANNING Decision-Making Approach • Rationality • Bounded rationality • Intuition Types of Problems and Decisions • Well structured—programmed • Unstructured—nonprogrammed Decision-Making Process Decision-Making Conditions • Certainty • Risk • Uncertainty Decision-Making Errors and Biases Decision • Choosing best alternative - maximizing - satisficing • Implementing • Evaluating Decision Maker’s Style • Linear thinking style • Nonlinear thinking style EXHIBIT 7-12 Overview of Managerial Decision Making Managers avoid the negative effects of these decision errors and biases by being aware of them and then not using them! Beyond that, managers also should pay attention to “how” they make decisions and try to identify the heuristics they typically use and critically evaluate how appropriate those heuristics are. Finally, managers might want to ask trusted individuals around them to help them identify weaknesses in their decision-making style and try to improve on those weaknesses. Overview of Managerial Decision Making Exhibit 7-12 provides an overview of managerial decision making. Because it’s in their best interests, managers want to make good decisions—that is, choose the “best” alternative, implement it, and determine whether it takes care of the problem, which is the reason the decision was needed in the first place. Their decision-making process is affected by four factors: the decision-making approach, the type of problem, decision-making conditions, and their decision-making style. In addition, certain decision-making errors and biases may impact the process. Each factor plays a role in determining how the manager makes a decision. So whether that decision involves addressing an employee’s habitual tardiness, resolving a product quality problem, or determining whether to enter a new market, remember that it has been shaped by a number of factors. LEARNING OUTCOME Identify effective decisionmaking techniques. 7.5 Effective Decision Making in Today’s World Per Carlsson, a product development manager at IKEA, “spends his days creating Volvostyle kitchens at Yugo prices.” His job is to take the “problems” identified by the company’s product-strategy council (a group of globe-trotting senior managers that monitors consumer trends and establishes product priorities) and turn them into furniture that customers around the world want to buy. One “problem” recently identified by the council: the kitchen has replaced the living room as the social and entertaining center in the home. Customers are looking for kitchens that convey comfort and cleanliness while still allowing them to CHAPTER 7 | MANAGERS AS DECISION MAKERS pursue their gourmet aspirations. Carlsson must take this information and make things happen. There are a lot of decisions to make—programmed and nonprogrammed—and the fact that IKEA is a global company makes it even more challenging. Comfort in Asia means small, cozy appliances and spaces, while North American customers want oversized glassware and giant refrigerators. His ability to make good decisions quickly has significant implications for IKEA’s success.27 Today’s business world revolves around making decisions, often risky ones, usually with incomplete or inadequate information, and under intense time pressure. Most managers make one decision after another; and as if that weren’t challenging enough, more is at stake than ever before. Bad decisions can cost millions. What do managers need to do to make effective decisions in today’s fast-moving world? Here are some guidelines. Understand cultural differences. Managers everywhere want to make good decisions. However, is there only one “best” way worldwide to make decisions? Or does the “best way depend on the values, beliefs, attitudes, and behavioral patterns of the people involved?”28 Know when it’s time to call it quits. When it’s evident that a decision isn’t working, don’t be afraid to pull the plug. For instance, the CEO of L.L.Bean pulled the plug on building a new customer call center in Waterville, Maine—“literally stopping the bulldozers in their tracks”—after T-Mobile said it was building its own call center right next door. He was afraid that the city would not have enough qualified workers for both companies and so decided to build 55 miles away in Bangor.30 He knew when it was time to call it quits. However, as we said earlier, many decision makers block or distort negative information because they don’t want to believe that their decision was bad. They become so attached to a decision that they refuse to recognize when it’s time to move on. In today’s dynamic environment, this type of thinking simply won’t work. Use an effective decision-making process. Experts say an effective decision-making process has these six characteristics: (1) It focuses on what’s important; (2) It’s logical and consistent; (3) It acknowledges both subjective and objective thinking and blends analytical with intuitive thinking; (4) It requires only as much information and analysis as is necessary to resolve a particular dilemma; (5) It encourages and guides the gathering of relevant information and informed opinion; and (6) It’s straightforward, reliable, easy to use, and flexible.”31 Build an organization that can spot the unexpected and quickly adapt to the changed environment. This suggestion comes from Karl Weick, an organizational psychologist, who has made a career of studying organizations and how people work.32 He calls such organizations highly reliable organizations (HROs) and says they share five habits. (1) They’re not tricked by their success. HROs are preoccupied with their failures. They’re alert to the smallest deviations and react quickly to anything that doesn’t fit with their expectations. He talks about Navy aviators who describe “leemers—a gut feeling that something isn’t right.” Typically, these leemers turn out to be accurate. Something, in fact, is wrong. Organizations need to create climates where people feel safe trusting their leemers. (2) They defer to the experts on the front line. Frontline workers—those who interact day in and day out with customers, products, suppliers, and so forth—have firsthand knowledge of what can and cannot be done, what will and will not work. Get their input. Let them make decisions. (3) They let unexpected circumstances provide the solution. One of Weick’s betterknown works is his study of the Mann Gulch fire in Montana that killed 13 smoke jumpers in 1949. The event was a massive, tragic organizational failure. However, the reaction of the foreman illustrates how effective decision makers respond to unexpected circumstances. When the fire was nearly on top of his men, he invented the escape fire—a small fire that consumed all the brush around the team, leaving an area where the larger fire couldn’t burn. His action was contrary to everything firefighters are taught (that is, you don’t start fires—you extinguish them), but at the time it was the best decision. (4) They embrace complexity. Because business is 193 29 by the numbers 90 percent of people believe they are just a little more competent, smarter, or kinder than average. 91 40 percent of U.S. companies use teams and groups to solve specific problems. 59 percent of employees say that a key obstacle to their job is that more attention is paid to placing blame than to solving problems. 77 percent of managers said that the number of decisions they made during a typical workday had increased. 43 percent of managers said that the amount of time given to each decision had decreased. About 40 percent more ideas are generated with electronic brainstorming than with individuals brainstorming alone. RPS (rock, paper, scisRPS Insors)Asia,is more recognized as a decision tiebreaker than it is in the United States. 20 percent of American adults said that they think most creatively in their cars. 194 PART THREE | PLANNING complex, these organizations recognize that it “takes complexity to sense complexity.” Rather than simplifying data, which we instinctively try to do when faced with complexity, these organizations aim for deeper understanding of the situation. They ask “why” and keep asking why as they probe more deeply into the causes of the problem and possible solutions. (5) Finally, they anticipate, but also recognize their limits. These organizations do try to anticipate as much as possible, but they recognize that they can’t anticipate everything. As Weick says, they don’t “think, then act. They think by acting. By actually doing things, you’ll find out what works and what doesn’t.” Making decisions in today’s fast-moving world isn’t easy. Successful managers need good decision-making skills to plan, organize, lead, and control. Do? What Would You Let’s Get Real: My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma, page 178 Tiffany Eulinger Area Manager Buckle Kansas City, MO I believe that guest satisfaction and attendance are what will show whether this was a “slam dunk” decision. You won’t know in the first year of the attraction whether it was a success because of all of the hype leading up to the theme park. It will be the continued success and attendance at the park that will prove it to be a great idea. I’m sure that when the final Harry Potter movie comes out in November 2010, the park will see a surge in attendance and excitement. Measuring attendance each year, as well as the cost to run and maintain the park would be important. I would measure success based on “sales” like we do in retail. Usually a new store will start out great because of advertising for the new store opening. It is the consistent growth each year on top of the previous year’s sales that truly proves whether the store was a “success.” 7 chapter r PREPARING FOR: Exams/Quizzes CHAPTER SUMMARY by Learning Outcomes Describe the eight steps in the decision-making process. LEARNING OUTCOME 7.1 LEARNING OUTCOME 7.2 LEARNING OUTCOME 7.3 LEARNING OUTCOME 7.4 A decision is a choice. The decision-making process consists of eight steps: (1) identify problem; (2) identify decision criteria; (3) weight the criteria; (4) develop alternatives; (5) analyze alternatives; (6) select alternative; (7) implement alternative; and (8) evaluate decision effectiveness. Explain the four ways managers make decisions. The assumptions of rationality are as follows: the problem is clear and unambiguous; a single, well-defined goal is to be achieved; all alternatives and consequences are known; and the final choice will maximize the payoff. Bounded rationality says that managers make rational decisions but are bounded (limited) by their ability to process information. Satisficing happens when decision makers accept solutions that are good enough. With escalation of commitment, managers increase commitment to a decision even when they have evidence it may have been a wrong decision. Intuitive decision making means making decisions on the basis of experience, feelings, and accumulated judgment. Using evidencebased management, a manager makes decisions based on the best available evidence. Classify decisions and decision-making conditions. Programmed decisions are repetitive decisions that can be handled by a routine approach and are used when the problem being resolved is straightforward, familiar, and easily defined (structured). Nonprogrammed decisions are unique decisions that require a custom-made solution and are used when the problems are new or unusual (unstructured) and for which information is ambiguous or incomplete. Certainty is a situation in which a manager can make accurate decisions because all outcomes are known. Risk is a situation in which a manager can estimate the likelihood of certain outcomes. Uncertainty is a situation in which a manager is not certain about the outcomes and can’t even make reasonable probability estimates. When decision makers face uncertainty, their psychological orientation will determine whether they follow a maximax choice (maximizing the maximum possible payoff); a maximin choice (maximizing the minimum possible payoff); or a minimax choice (minimizing the maximum regret—amount of money that could have been made if a different decision had been made). Describe different decision-making styles and discuss how biases affect decision making. A person’s thinking style reflects two things: the source of information you tend to use (external or internal) and how you process that information (linear or nonlinear). These four dimensions were collapsed into two styles. The linear thinking style is characterized by a person’s preference for using external data and processing this information through rational, logical thinking. The nonlinear thinking style is characterized by a preference for internal sources of information and processing this information with internal insights, feelings, and hunches. The 12 common decision-making errors and biases include overconfidence, immediate gratification, anchoring, selective perception, confirmation, framing, availability, representation, randomness, sunk costs, self-serving bias, and hindsight. The managerial decision making model helps explain how the decision-making process is used to choose the best alternative(s) either through maximizing or satisficing and then implement and evaluate the alternative. It also helps explain what factors affect the decision-making process including the decision-making approach (rationality, bounded rationality, intuition), the types of problems and decisions (well structured and programmed or unstructured and nonprogrammed), the decision-making conditions (certainty, risk, uncertainty), and the decision maker’s style (linear or nonlinear). 195 196 PART THREE | PLANNING LEARNING OUTCOME 7.5 Identify effective decision-making techniques. Managers can make effective decisions by understanding cultural differences in decision making, knowing when it’s time to call it quits, using an effective decision-making process, and building an organization that can spot the unexpected and quickly adapt to the changed environment. An effective decision-making process (1) focuses on what’s important; (2) is logical and consistent; (3) acknowledges both subjective and objective thinking and blends both analytical and intuitive approaches; (4) requires only “enough” information as is necessary to resolve a problem; (5) encourages and guides gathering relevant information and informed opinions; and (6) is straightforward, reliable, easy to use, and flexible. The five habits of highly reliable organizations are (1) not being tricked by their successes; (2) deferring to experts on the front line; (3) letting unexpected circumstances provide the solution; (4) embracing complexity; and (5) anticipating, but also recognizing, limits. 7.1 7.5 196 REVIEW AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. Why is decision making often described as the essence of a manager’s job? 2. Describe the eight steps in the decision-making process. 3. Compare and contrast the four ways managers make decisions. 4. How might an organization’s culture influence the way managers make decisions? 5. Explain the two types of problems and decisions. Contrast the three decision-making conditions. 6. All of us bring biases to the decisions we make. What would be the drawbacks of having biases? Could there be any advantages to having biases? Explain. What are the implications for managerial decision making? 7. Would you call yourself a linear or nonlinear thinker? What are the decision-making implications of these labels? What are the implications for choosing where you want to work? 8. “As managers use computers and software tools more often, they’ll be able to make more rational decisions.” Do you agree or disagree with this statement? Why? 9. How can managers blend the guidelines for making effective decisions in today’s world with the rationality and bounded rationality models of decision making, or can they? Explain. 10. Is there a difference between wrong decisions and bad decisions? Why do good managers sometimes make wrong decisions? Bad decisions? How can managers improve their decision-making skills? ETHICS DILEMMA Company executive Peter Tamte relied on the advice of a number of Fallujah veterans and calls the video game a “documentary-style reconstruction that will be so true to the original battle, gamers will almost feel what it was like to fight in Fallujah in November 2004.” What do you think? What ethical issues do you see here? Should the company proceed with the game’s release? Why or why not? The 75 employees of Atomic Games worked nearly four years creating a realistic video game called Six Days in Fallujah, “weaving in real war footage and interviews with Marines who had fought there.”33 Now, relatives of dead Marines are angry. Said one mom whose son was killed by a sniper in Fallujah, “By making it something people play for fun, they are trivializing the battle.” CHAPTER 7 | MANAGERS AS DECISION MAKERS SKILLS EXERCISE Developing Your Creativity Skill About the Skill Creativity is a frame of mind. You need to open your mind to new ideas. Every individual has the ability to be creative, but many people simply don’t try to develop that ability. In contemporary organizations, such people may have difficulty achieving success. Dynamic environments and managerial chaos require that managers look for new and innovative ways to attain their goals as well as those of the organization.34 Steps in Practicing the Skill 1. Think of yourself as creative. Although it’s a simple suggestion, research shows that if you think you can’t be creative, you won’t be. Believing in yourself is the first step in becoming more creative. 2. Pay attention to your intuition. Every individual’s subconscious mind works well. Sometimes answers come to you when least expected. For example, when you are about to go to sleep, your relaxed mind sometimes whispers a solution to a problem you’re facing. Listen to that voice. In fact, most creative people keep a notepad near their bed and write down those great ideas when they occur. That way, they don’t forget them. 3. Move away from your comfort zone. Every individual has a comfort zone in which certainty exists. But creativity and the known often do not mix. To be creative, you need to move away from the status quo and focus your mind on something new. 4. Engage in activities that put you outside your comfort zone. You not only must think differently; you need to do things differently and, thus, challenge yourself. WORKING TOGETHER Team Exercise Being effective in decision making is something that managers obviously want. What’s involved with being a good decision maker? Form groups of three to four students. Discuss your experiences making decisions—for example, buying a car or some other purchase, choosing classes and professors, making summer or spring break plans, and so forth. Each of you should share times when you felt you made good decisions. Analyze what happened Learning to play a musical instrument or learning a foreign language, for example, opens your mind to a new challenge. 5. Seek a change of scenery. People are often creatures of habit. Creative people force themselves out of their habits by changing their scenery, which may mean going into a quiet and serene area where you can be alone with your thoughts. 6. Find several right answers. In the discussion of bounded rationality, we said that people seek solutions that are good enough. Being creative means continuing to look for other solutions even when you think you have solved the problem. A better, more creative solution just might be found. 7. Play your own devil’s advocate. Challenging yourself to defend your solutions helps you to develop confidence in your creative efforts. Second-guessing yourself may also help you find more creative solutions. 8. Believe in finding a workable solution. Like believing in yourself, you also need to believe in your ideas. If you don’t think you can find a solution, you probably won’t. 9. Brainstorm with others. Being creative is not a solitary activity. Bouncing ideas off others creates a synergistic effect. 10. Turn creative ideas into action. Coming up with ideas is only half the process. Once the ideas are generated, they must be implemented. Keeping great ideas in your mind or on paper that no one will read does little to expand your creative abilities. Practicing the Skill How many words can you make using the letters in the word brainstorm? There are at least 95. during that decision-making process that contributed to it being a good decision. Then, consider some decisions that you felt were bad. What happened to make them bad? What common characteristics, if any, did you identify among the good decisions? The bad decisions? Come up with a bulleted list of practical suggestions for making good decisions. As a group, be prepared to share your list with the class. 197 198 PART THREE | PLANNING MY TURN TO BE A MANAGER For one week, pay close attention to the decisions you make and how you make them. Write a description of five of those decisions using the steps in the decisionmaking process as your guide. Also, describe whether you relied on external or internal sources of information to help you make the decision and whether you think you were more linear or nonlinear in how you processed that information. When you feel you haven’t made a good decision, assess how you could have made a better decision. Find two examples of a procedure, a rule, and a policy. Bring a description of these examples to class and be prepared to share them. Write a procedure, a rule, and a policy for your instructor to use in your class. Be sure that each one is clear and understandable. And be sure to explain how it fits the characteristics of being a procedure, a rule, or a policy. Find three examples of managerial decisions described in any of the popular business periodicals (Wall Street Journal, BusinessWeek, Fortune, etc.). Write a paper describing each decision and any other information such as what led to the decision, what happened as a result of the decision, etc. What did you learn about decision making from these examples? Interview two managers and ask them for suggestions on what it takes to be a good decision maker. Write down their suggestions and be prepared to present them in class. Steve’s and Mary’s suggested readings: Noel M. Tichy and Warren G. Bennis, Judgment: How Winning Leaders Make Great Calls (Portfolio, 2007); Gerd Gigerenzer, Gut Feelings: The Intelligence of the Unconscious (Viking, 2007); Stephen P. Robbins, Decide & Conquer: Make Winning Decisions and Take Control of Your Life (Financial Times Press, 2004); and John S. Hammond, Ralph L. Keeney, and Howard Raiffa, Smart Choices: A Practical Guide to Making Better Decisions (Harvard Business School Press, 1999). Do a Web search on the phrase “101 dumbest moments in business.” Get the most current version of this end-of-year list. Pick three of the examples and describe what happened. What’s your reaction to the example? How could the managers have made better decisions? In your own words, write down three things you learned in this chapter about being a good manager. Self-knowledge can be a powerful learning tool. Go to mymanagementlab.com and complete these self-assessment exercises: How Well Do I Handle Ambiguity? How Well Do I Respond to Turbulent Change? and What’s My Decision-Making Style? Using the results of your assessments, identify personal strengths and weaknesses. What will you do to reinforce your strengths and improve your weaknesses? CHAPTER 7 | MANAGERS AS DECISION MAKERS CASE APPLICATION The Curtain Falls t’s been called one of “the entertainment industry’s biggest pro- I gramming debacles.”35 Jay Leno moved from host of the “Tonight Show” to his own talk show, “The Jay Leno Show,” which aired at the 10 p.m. weeknight time slot. Conan O’Brien was brought on as Leno’s replacement on the “Tonight Show,” which has always aired after the local news. The Jay Leno–Conan O’Brien fiasco started with a decision by NBC executives to save some money by giving Leno one of the oldest formats in TV programming: a comedy-variety show with a comedian, a stage, guests, and in-show ads. But that decision was also a radical experiment based on a single show airing every single weeknight during prime time on a major broadcast network. This format was cheaper to produce for an entire week than 60 minutes of the pricey scripted dramas that are usually broadcast during that time period. Jeff Gaspin, chairman of television “The Tonight Show” host Jay Leno (right) interviews his replacement Conan O’Brien during Leno’s final taping as host of the show before he began his own primetime talk show, an NBC management decision to cut costs and dubbed as one of “the entertainment industry’s biggest programming debacles.” entertainment at NBC Universal, said, “I don’t think it’s wrong to take chances. . . . Sometimes they work. Sometimes they don’t.” And this decision wasn’t working. It all started to unravel when ratings for Leno’s talk show were low and continued to sink. One media analyst said, “Nobody’s happy—the talent isn’t happy, the advertisers aren’t happy, and the audience isn’t happy.” Local network affiliates that rely on that 10 p.m. slot to lead people into the late local news rebelled. Those affiliates threatened to preempt Leno’s show with other programming. But that wasn’t NBC’s only problem. O’Brien’s “Tonight Show” also was doing poorly in its time slot, losing resoundingly to “Late Show with David Letterman” on CBS for the first time in 15 years. NBC executives continued to struggle with decision making. It took nearly two weeks of a very public spectacle for them to craft a solution in which Leno returned to his gig at the “Tonight Show” and O’Brien left with a $40 million agreement to walk away from “his dream job.” And so the curtain closes on a story NBC executives wish had never been written. Discussion Questions 1. Would you characterize television programming decisions as structured or unstructured? Explain. What type of decision-making condition would you consider this to be? Explain. 2. What criteria did NBC use in evaluating its initial decision to move Leno and O’Brien? Was that criteria appropriate? Why or why not? 3. Evaluate Jeff Gaspin’s statement, “I don’t think it’s wrong to take chances. . . . Sometimes they work. Sometimes they don’t.” What does it say about his decision-making style? 4. Describe how NBC executives could have used each of the following to make better decisions: (a) rationality, (b) bounded rationality, (c) intuition, and (d) evidence-based management. 199 200 PART THREE | PLANNING CASE APPLICATION Underwater Chaos I t would be a claustrophobic’s worst nightmare—trapped subsea in the 31-mile Eurotunnel beneath the English Channel on the Eurostar train that travels between Britain and the European mainland.36 A series of breakdowns on five London-bound trains from Brussels, which began December 18, 2009, left more than 2,000 passengers stranded for up to 16 hours. Many of those passengers trapped in the dark and overheated tunnel endured serious distress. “Parents had to remove their children’s clothes, leaving them in underwear and diapers. Some passengers suffered stress and panic attacks. Others started feeling ill due to the heat.” Was this just an unfortunate incident for the unlucky passengers who happened to be on those trains or did poor managerial decision making about the operation of both the train and the channel tunnel also play a role? An independent review of the incident blamed Eurostar and the operator of the tunnel for being unprepared for severe winter weather. The report said that Eurostar had failed to adequately maintain and winterize its high-speed trains to protect sensitive components from malfunctioning due to excessive snow and moisture buildup. At the time of the Eurostar train breakdowns, severe winter weather had been wreaking havoc on Europe. Airlines, car and truck drivers, and other rail operators across Europe were also suffering from a winter that was on course to be the coldest in more than 30 years. Freezing weather and snow had caused travel problems for days in Northern Europe. In addition, the report criticized Eurotunnel (the operator of the channel tunnel) for having unsatisfactory communications systems in place inside the tunnel, which could have given its employees direct contact with train drivers and other Eurostar staff. “If a train breaks down and passengers have to be rescued and evacuated, this must be done with greater speed and consideration. In an emergency, passengers need to have prompt information and regular updates.” Although the severe weather conditions undoubtedly played a role in this fiasco, there’s no doubt that managers could have done a better job of making decisions in preparing for such scenarios. Discussion Questions 1. What’s your reaction to this story? What does it illustrate about decision making? 2. How could the decision-making process have helped in both the response to the crisis situation and in preventing it from happening? 3. Could procedures, policies, and rules play any role in future crisis situations like this one? If so, how? If not, why not? 4. What could other organizations learn from this incident? This page intentionally left blank Meet the Manager Chuck Pick President Chuck’s Parking Service, Inc. Sherman Oaks, CA MY JOB: I’m the president and owner of Chuck’s Parking Service, Inc. We are a full-service valet parking and transportation company that provides both valet parking and shuttle services for commercial locations and important events in Los Angeles and the surrounding area. I am personally involved in every facet of the company and its operations. BEST PART OF MY JOB: My greatest satisfaction comes from meeting a new client with a particularly challenging parking situation, designing and implementing a sound operational plan, and seeing my talented management team and employees execute every detail exactly as planned. It’s a thrill to work with some of the most important people and events in the world, from standing U.S. presidents to the Academy Awards. Define the nature and purposes of planning. page 204 Classify the types of goals organizations might have and the plans they use. page 205 Compare and contrast approaches to goal setting and planning. page 208 Discuss contemporary issues in planning. page 212 WORST PART OF MY JOB: As the owner of a service industry business, there is no downtime. We are working when most people are not (weekends, evenings, and holidays). Although I surround myself with competent managers and supervisors, it’s impossible to ever completely clear my mind of the business. Late-night calls regarding damages or other unforeseen problems are especially unpleasant. BEST MANAGEMENT ADVICE EVER RECEIVED: You can’t cheat on service! Either provide a great service or don’t provide a service at all. Avoid the temptation of cutting service to fit a client’s budget and don’t lower your standards to the level of your competition. I constantly tell myself that you can’t do every event. 203 A Manager’s Dilemma A massive earthquake struck Haiti mobilize, load, and deliver trailers of food to Miami on January 12, 2010, causing cata- where it was loaded onto a ship. WFP already had strophic damage. 1 Mobilizing all moved more than 400 tons of emergency food the resources and people for the aboard 747s and smaller aircraft, encountering relief effort required considerable delays at Port-au-Prince’s airport because of all the planning. The World Food Program relief flights. All told, the WFP delivered nearly 3 million (WFP), the world’s largest humani- meals in the first days after the quake—enough to tarian relief organization, immedi- feed the population of Port-au-Prince for one day. ately assembled land, sea, and air Policastro said, “This is the most complex operation resources to move hundreds of tons that WFP has ever launched. Haiti presented a of emergency supplies. unique problem: an isolated island and heavily Lou Policastro, executive vice populated in the central location that was hit hard- president of Geodis Wilson, which est by the quake.” What types of plans might be manages WFP’s logistics, was con- needed to ensure that efficient and effective aid tacted initially over the Martin Luther efforts continue? King holiday weekend when “nothing was open.” It took four days to What Would You Do? You may think that “planning” isn’t something that’s relevant to you right now. But when you figure out your class schedule for the next term or when you decide what you need to do to finish a class project on time, you’re planning. And planning is something that all managers, such as Lou Policastro and others who responded to the Haiti relief effort, need to do. Although what they plan and how they plan may differ, it’s still important that they do plan. In this chapter we present the basics: what planning is, why managers plan, and how they plan. LEARNING OUTCOME Define the nature and purposes of planning. 8.1 The What and Why of Planning Boeing called its new 787 aircraft the Dreamliner, but the project turned into more of a nightmare for managers. The new plane was the company’s most popular product ever, mostly because of its innovations, especially in fuel efficiency. However, the plane is two and a half years behind schedule. The first airplanes are scheduled to be delivered to ANA (All Nippon Airways) in the fourth quarter of 2010. Boeing admitted that the project’s timeline was way too ambitious even though every detail had been meticulously planned.2 Some customers (the airlines who ordered the jets)—around 60 in total—got tired of waiting or responded to the changing economic environment and canceled their orders. Could Boeing’s managers have planned better? What Is Planning? As we stated in Chapter 1, planning involves defining the organization’s goals, establishing strategies for achieving those goals, and developing plans to integrate and coordinate work activities. It’s concerned with both ends (what) and means (how). When we use the term planning, we mean formal planning. In formal planning, specific goals covering a specific time period are defined. These goals are written and shared with organizational members to reduce ambiguity and create a common understanding about what needs to be done. Finally, specific plans exist for achieving these goals. 204 CHAPTER 8 | FOUNDATIONS OF PLANNING 205 Why Do Managers Plan? Planning seems to take a lot of effort. So why should managers plan? We can give you at least four reasons. First, planning provides direction to managers and nonmanagers alike. When employees know what their organization or work unit is trying to accomplish and what they must contribute to reach goals, they can coordinate their activities, cooperate with each other, and do what it takes to accomplish those goals. Without planning, departments and individuals might work at cross-purposes and prevent the organization from efficiently achieving its goals. Next, planning reduces uncertainty by forcing managers to look ahead, anticipate change, consider the impact of change, and develop appropriate responses. Although planning won’t eliminate uncertainty, managers plan so they can respond effectively. In addition, planning minimizes waste and redundancy. When work activities are coordinated around plans, inefficiencies become obvious and can be corrected or eliminated. Finally, planning establishes the goals or standards used in controlling. When managers plan, they develop goals and plans. When they control, they see whether the plans have been carried out and the goals met. Without planning, there would be no goals against which to measure work effort. Planning and Performance Is planning worthwhile? Numerous studies have looked at the relationship between planning and performance.3 Although most showed generally positive relationships, we can’t say that organizations that formally plan always outperform those that don’t plan. What can we conclude? First, generally speaking, formal planning is associated with positive financial results—higher profits, higher return on assets, and so forth. Second, it seems that doing a good job planning and implementing those plans play a bigger part in high performance than does how much planning is done. Next, in those studies where formal planning didn’t lead to higher performance, the external environment often was the culprit. When external forces—think governmental regulations or powerful labor unions—constrain managers’ options, it reduces the impact planning has on an organization’s performance. Finally, the planning-performance relationship seems to be influenced by the planning time frame. It seems that at least four years of formal planning is required before it begins to affect performance. Goals and Plans 8.2 Planning is often called the primary management function because it establishes the basis for all the other things managers do as they organize, lead, and control. It involves two important aspects: goals and plans. Goals (objectives) are desired outcomes or targets.4 They guide management decisions and form the criterion against which work results are measured. That’s why they’re often described as the essential elements of planning. You have to know the desired target or outcome before you can establish plans for reaching it. Plans are documents that outline how goals are going to be met. They usually include resource allocations, schedules, and other necessary actions to accomplish the goals. As managers plan, they develop both goals and plans. LEARNING OUTCOME Classify the types of goals organizations might have and the plans they use. planning goals (objectives) plans Defining the organization’s goals, establishing strategies for achieving those goals, and developing plans to integrate and coordinate work activities Desired outcomes or targets Documents that outline how goals are going to be met 206 PART THREE | PLANNING The goal that guides management decisions at Sykes Enterprises is that every client will be more efficient, more profitable, and have stronger loyalty to the company brands due to the services provided by Sykes. As a global outsourcing and consulting service, Sykes operates more than 40 technical help and customer support centers in the Americas, Asia, Europe, and Africa. One of the plans Sykes has for achieving its goal is to employ the best individuals in the industry and to reward them for their commitment to excellence. For example, the well-trained technicians shown here at Sykes’ multilingual call center in Manila speak fluent English in responding to clients’ questions and providing comprehensive service that ensures customer satisfaction. Types of Goals Goals are important because they set priorities for which managers and employees should strive. Goals are often set higher than expectations, making a clear and concise plan even more important. It might seem that organizations have a single goal. Businesses want to make a profit and not-for-profit organizations want to meet the needs of some constituent group(s). However, a single goal can’t adequately define an organization’s success. And if managers emphasize only one goal, other goals essential for long-term success are ignored. Also, as we discussed in Chapter 5, using a single goal such as profit may result in unethical behaviors because managers and employees will ignore other aspects of their jobs in order to look good on that one measure.5 In reality, all organizations have multiple goals. For instance, businesses may want to increase market share, keep employees enthused about working for the organization, and work toward more environmentally sustainable practices. And a church provides a place for religious practices, but also assists economically disadvantaged individuals in its community and acts as a social gathering place for church members. We can classify most company’s goals as either strategic or financial. Financial goals are related to the financial performance of the organization, while strategic goals are related to all other areas of an organization’s performance. For instance, McDonald’s states that its financial targets are 3 to 5 percent average annual sales and revenue growth, 6 to 7 percent average annual operating income growth, and returns on invested capital in the high teens.6 Here’s an example of a strategic goal from Bloomberg L.P.: “We want to be the world’s most influential news organization.”7 The goals just described are stated goals—official statements of what an organization says, and what it wants its stakeholders to believe, its goals are. However, stated goals— which can be found in an organization’s charter, annual report, public relations announcements, or in public statements made by managers—are often conflicting and influenced by what various stakeholders think organizations should do. For instance, Nike’s goal is “delivering inspiration and innovation to every athlete.” Canadian company EnCana’s vision is to “be the world’s high performance benchmark independent oil and gas company.” Deutsche Bank’s goal is “to be the leading global provider of financial solutions, creating lasting value for our clients, our shareholders and people and the communities in which we operate.”8 Such statements are vague and probably better represent management’s public relations skills than being meaningful guides to what the organization is actually trying to accomplish. It shouldn’t be surprising then to find that an organization’s stated goals are often irrelevant to what actually goes on.9 If you want to know an organization’s real goals—those goals an organization actually pursues—observe what organizational members are doing. Actions define priorities. For example, universities may say their goal is limiting class sizes, facilitating close student-faculty relations, and actively involving students in the learning process, but then they put students into 300+ student lecture classes! Knowing that real and stated goals may differ is important for recognizing what you might otherwise think are inconsistencies. CHAPTER 8 | FOUNDATIONS OF PLANNING 207 EXHIBIT 8-1 Types of Plans Types of Plans Breadth Time Frame Specificity Frequency of Use Strategic Long term Directional Single use Operational Short term Specific Standing Types of Plans The most popular ways to describe organizational plans are breadth (strategic versus operational), time frame (short term versus long term), specificity (directional versus specific), and frequency of use (single use versus standing). As Exhibit 8-1 shows, these types of plans aren’t independent. That is, strategic plans are usually long term, directional, and single use whereas operational plans are usually short term, specific, and standing. What does each include? Strategic plans are plans that apply to the entire organization and establish the organization’s overall goals. Plans that encompass a particular operational area of the organization are called operational plans. These two types of plans differ because strategic plans are broad while operational plans are narrow. The number of years used to define short-term and long-term plans has declined considerably because of environmental uncertainty. Long-term used to mean anything over seven years. Try to imagine what you’re likely to be doing in seven years and you can begin to appreciate how difficult it would be for managers to establish plans that far in the future. We define long-term plans as those with a time frame beyond three years.10 Short-term plans cover one year or less. Any time period in between would be an intermediate plan. Although these time classifications are fairly common, an organization can use any planning time frame it wants. Intuitively, it would seem that specific plans would be preferable to directional, or loosely guided, plans. Specific plans are clearly defined and leave no room for interpretation. A specific plan states its objectives in a way that eliminates ambiguity and problems with misunderstanding. For example, a manager who seeks to increase his or her unit’s work output by 8 percent over a given 12-month period might establish specific procedures, budget allocations, and schedules of activities to reach that goal. However, when uncertainty is high and managers must be flexible in order to respond to unexpected changes, directional plans are preferable. Directional plans are flexible plans that set out general guidelines. They provide focus but don’t lock managers into stated goals operational plans specific plans Official statements of what an organization says, and what it wants its various stakeholders to believe, its goals are Plans that encompass a particular operational area of the organization Plans that are clearly defined and leave no room for interpretation long-term plans directional plans real goals Plans with a time frame beyond three years Goals that an organization actually pursues, as defined by the actions of its members short-term plans Plans that are flexible and set out general guidelines strategic plans Plans that apply to the entire organization and establish the organization’s overall goals Plans covering one year or less 208 PART THREE | PLANNING Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO of Amazon.com, understands the importance of goals and plans. As a leader, he exudes energy, enthusiasm, and drive.12 He’s fun loving (his legendary laugh has been described as a flock of Canadian geese on nitrous oxide) but has pursued his vision for Amazon with serious intensity and has demonstrated an ability to inspire his employees through the ups and downs of a rapidly growing company. When Bezos founded the company as on online bookstore, his goal was to be the leader in online retailing. Now fifteen years later, Amazon is quickly becoming the world’s general store, selling not only books, CDs, and DVDs, but LEGOs, power drills, and Jackalope Buck taxidermy mounts, to name a few of the thousands of products you can buy. LEARNING OUTCOME Compare and contrast approaches to goal setting and planning. 8.3 specific goals or courses of action. For example, Sylvia Rhone, president of Motown Records, said she has a simple goal—to “sign great artists.”11 So instead of creating a specific plan to produce and market 10 albums from new artists this year, she might formulate a directional plan to use a network of people around the world to alert her to new and promising talent so she can increase the number of new artists she has under contract. Keep in mind, however, that the flexibility of directional plans must be weighed against the lack of clarity of specific plans. Some plans that managers develop are ongoing while others are used only once. A single-use plan is a one-time plan specifically designed to meet the needs of a unique situation. For instance, when Walmart wanted to expand the number of its stores in China, top-level executives formulated a single-use plan as a guide. In contrast, standing plans are ongoing plans that provide guidance for activities performed repeatedly. Standing plans include policies, rules, and procedures, which we defined in Chapter 7. An example of a standing plan is the sexual harassment policy developed by the University of Arizona. It provides guidance to university administrators, faculty, and staff as they make hiring plans. Setting Goals and Developing Plans Taylor Haines has just been elected president of her business school’s honorary fraternity. She wants the organization to be more actively involved in the business school than it has been. Francisco Garza graduated from Tecnologico de Monterrey with a degree in marketing and computers three years ago and went to work for a regional consulting services firm. He recently was promoted to manager of an eight-person e-business development team and hopes to strengthen the team’s financial contributions to the firm. What should Taylor and Francisco do now? Their first step should be to set goals. Approaches to Setting Goals As we stated earlier, goals provide the direction for all management decisions and actions and form the criterion against which actual accomplishments are measured. Everything organizational members do should be oriented toward achieving goals. These goals can be set either through a traditional process or by using management by objectives. In traditional goal setting, goals set by top managers flow down through the organization and become subgoals for each organizational area. This traditional perspective assumes that top managers know what’s best because they see the “big picture.” And the goals passed down to each succeeding level guide individual employees as they work to achieve those assigned goals. If Taylor were to use this approach, she would see what goals the dean or director of the school of business had set and develop goals for her group that would contribute to achieving those goals. Or take a manufacturing business, for example. The president tells the vice president of production what he expects manufacturing costs to be for the coming year and tells the marketing vice president what level he expects sales to reach for the year. These goals are passed to the next organizational level and written to reflect the responsibilities of that level, passed to the next level, and so forth. Then, at some later time, performance is evaluated to determine whether the assigned goals have been achieved. Although the process is supposed to happen in this way, in reality it doesn’t always do so. Turning broad strategic goals into departmental, team, and individual goals can be a difficult and frustrating process. Another problem with traditional goal setting is that when top managers define the organization’s goals in broad terms—such as achieving “sufficient” profits or increasing “market CHAPTER 8 | FOUNDATIONS OF PLANNING 209 EXHIBIT 8-2 ”We need to improve the company’s performance.” ”I want to see a significant improvement in this division’s profits.” Top Management’s Objective Division Manager’s Objective ”Don’t worry about quality; just work fast.” ”Increase profits regardless of the means.” Department Manager’s Objective Individual Employee’s Objective leadership”—these ambiguous goals have to be made more specific as they flow down through the organization. Managers at each level define the goals and apply their own interpretations and biases as they make them more specific. However, what often happens is that clarity is lost as the goals make their way down from the top of the organization to lower levels. Exhibit 8-2 illustrates what can happen. But it doesn’t have to be that way. For example, at the CarrierCarlyle Compressor Facility in Stone Mountain, Georgia, employees and managers focus their work efforts around goals. Those goals encompass meeting and exceeding customer needs, concentrating on continuous improvement efforts, and engaging the workforce. To keep everyone focused on those goals, a “thermostat”—a 3-foot-by-4-foot metric indicator—found at the employee entrance communicates what factory performance is at any given time and where attention is needed. “The thermostat outlines plant goals across a range of metrics as well as monthly performance against those goals.” Company executives state, “We have found that well-executed pre-planning drives improved results.” Does their goal approach work? In the past three years, the facility has experienced a nearly 76 percent reduction in customer reject rates and a 54.5 percent reduction in OSHA-recordable injury and illness cases.13 When the hierarchy of organizational goals is clearly defined, as it is at Carrier-Carlyle Compressor, it forms an integrated network of goals, or a means-ends chain. Higherlevel goals (or ends) are linked to lower-level goals, which serve as the means for their accomplishment. In other words, the goals achieved at lower levels become the means to reach the goals (ends) at the next level. And the accomplishment of goals at that level becomes the means to achieve the goals (ends) at the next level and on up through the different organizational levels. That’s how traditional goal setting is supposed to work. Instead of using traditional goal setting, many organizations use management by objectives (MBO), a process of setting mutually agreed-upon goals and using those goals to evaluate employee performance. If Francisco were to use this approach, he would sit down with each member of his team and set goals and periodically review whether progress was being made toward achieving those goals. MBO programs have four elements: goal specificity, participative decision making, an explicit time period, and performance feedback.14 Instead of using goals to make sure employees are doing what they’re supposed to be doing, single-use plan means-ends chain A one-time plan specifically designed to meet the needs of a unique situation An integrated network of goals in which the accomplishment of goals at one level serves as the means for achieving the goals, or ends, at the next level standing plans Ongoing plans that provide guidance for activities performed repeatedly traditional goal setting An approach to setting goals in which top managers set goals that then flow down through the organization and become subgoals for each organizational area management by objectives (MBO) A process of setting mutually agreed-upon goals and using those goals to evaluate employee performance The Downside of Traditional Goal Setting 210 PART THREE | PLANNING EXHIBIT 8-3 Steps in MBO 1. The organization’s overall objectives and strategies are formulated. 2. Major objectives are allocated among divisional and departmental units. 3. Unit managers collaboratively set specific objectives for their units with their managers. 4. Specific objectives are collaboratively set with all department members. 5. Action plans, defining how objectives are to be achieved, are specified and agreed upon by managers and employees. 6. The action plans are implemented. 7. Progress toward objectives is periodically reviewed, and feedback is provided. 8. Successful achievement of objectives is reinforced by performance-based rewards. MBO uses goals to motivate them as well. The appeal is that it focuses on employees working to accomplish goals they’ve had a hand in setting. Exhibit 8-3 lists the steps in a typical MBO program. Does MBO work? Studies have shown that it can increase employee performance and organizational productivity. For example, one review of MBO programs found productivity gains in almost all of them.15 But is MBO relevant for today’s organizations? If it’s viewed as a way of setting goals, then yes, because research shows that goal setting can be an effective approach to motivating employees.16 I set goals by carefully studying historic business data and realistically exceeding our past performance by adding incentives and making use of new and innovative marketing approaches. CHARACTERISTICS OF WELL-WRITTEN GOALS. Goals aren’t all written the same way. Some are better than others at making the desired outcomes clear. For instance, the CEO of Procter & Gamble said that he wants to see the company add close to 548,000 new customers a day, every day, for the next five years.17 It’s an ambitious but specific goal. Managers should be able to write well-written goals. What makes a “well-written” goal?18 Exhibit 8-4 lists the characteristics. STEPS IN GOAL SETTING. Managers should follow five steps when setting goals. 1. Review the organization’s mission, or purpose. A mission is a broad statement of an organization’s purpose that provides an overall guide to what organizational members think is important. Managers should review the mission before writing goals because goals should reflect that mission. 2. Evaluate available resources. You don’t want to set goals that are impossible to achieve given your available resources. Even though goals should be challenging, they should be realistic. After all, if the resources you have to work with won’t allow you to achieve a goal no matter how hard you try or how much effort is exerted, you shouldn’t set that goal. That would be like the person with a $50,000 annual income and no other financial resources setting a goal of building an investment portfolio worth $1 million in three years. No matter how hard he or she works at it, it’s not going to happen. 3. Determine the goals individually or with input from others. The goals reflect desired outcomes and should be congruent with the organizational mission and goals in other organizational areas. These goals should be measurable, specific, and include a time frame for accomplishment. EXHIBIT 8-4 Well-Written Goals • • • • • • Written in terms of outcomes rather than actions Measurable and quantifiable Clear as to a time frame Challenging yet attainable Written down Communicated to all necessary organizational members CHAPTER 8 | FOUNDATIONS OF PLANNING 4. Write down the goals and communicate them to all who need to know. Writing down and communicating goals forces people to think them through. The written goals also become visible evidence of the importance of working toward something. 5. Review results and whether goals are being met. If goals aren’t being met, change them as needed. 19 by the numbers 51 percent of managers said they were approaching planning differently by using more business scenarios and data-driven approaches. 47 69 7 75 19 percent of managers said their organization’s projects always or often meet their goals. Once the goals have been established, written down, and communicated, a manager is ready to develop plans for pursuing the goals. Developing Plans The process of developing plans is influenced by three contingency factors and by the planning approach followed. CONTINGENCY FACTORS IN PLANNING. Look back at our chapter-opening “A Manager’s Dilemma.” How will Lou Policastro and other aid relief managers know what types of plans to develop for what needs to get done in responding to the Haiti disaster? Three contingency factors affect the choice of plans: organizational level, degree of environmental uncertainty, and length of future commitments.20 Exhibit 8-5 shows the relationship between a manager’s level in the organization and the type of planning done. For the most part, lower-level managers do operational planning while upper-level managers do strategic planning. The second contingency factor is environmental uncertainty, a factor that was quite obvious in the chapter-opening Haitian relief effort example. When uncertainty is high, plans should be specific, but flexible. Managers must be prepared to change or amend plans as they’re implemented. At times, they may even have to abandon the plans.21 For example, prior to Continental Airlines’ merger with United Airlines, the former CEO and his management team established a specific goal of focusing on what customers wanted most—on-time flights—to help the company become more competitive in the highly uncertain airline industry. Because of the high level of uncertainty, the management team identified a “destination, but not a flight plan,” and changed plans as necessary to achieve that goal of on-time service. The last contingency factor also is related to the time frame of plans. The commitment concept says that plans should extend far enough to meet those commitments made when the plans were developed. Planning for too long or too short a time period is inefficient and ineffective. What happened at AT&T with the iPhone is a good example of why it’s important to 211 percent of managers said teams are not given enough resources to complete projects. percent of information executives said they have no plan for disaster recovery. percent of managers said their company’s planning approach wasn’t working. percent of executives said that planning was an important skill. EXHIBIT 8-5 Planning and Organizational Level Strategic Planning Top Executives Middle-Level Managers Operational Planning First-Level Managers mission commitment concept The purpose of an organization Plans should extend far enough to meet those commitments made when the plans were developed 212 PART THREE | PLANNING Planning I do includes looking at the job before me and breaking it into smaller components. For example, if a client is expecting 500 guests for a fundraiser, I ask myself what would I do if this was for 100 guests. That way, we can ensure that client and guests experience the same high-quality service and attention to detail for a large event as that for a smaller, more intimate event. LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss contemporary issues in planning. 8.4 understand the commitment concept. When it secured exclusive rights to support the iPhone on its wireless network in June 2007, both Apple and AT&T vastly underestimated the phone’s popularity—some 42.4 million have been sold. And then there’s all those apps—at least 140,000 different ones that have been downloaded some 3 billion times—many of which consume bandwidth. AT&T’s network “simply can’t handle the traffic.” AT&T’s Operations president John Stankey said, “We missed on our usage estimates.” As the company discovered, the bandwidth-hungry super-phone has created serious challenges.22 How does this illustrate the commitment concept? In becoming the primary provider of the iPhone, AT&T “committed” to whatever future expenses are generated by that planned decision. And they have to live with the decision and its consequences, good and bad. Approaches to Planning Federal, state, and local government officials are working together on a plan to boost populations of wild salmon in the northwestern United States. Managers in the Global Fleet Graphics division of the 3M Company are developing detailed plans to satisfy increasingly demanding customers and to battle more aggressive competitors. Emilio Azcárraga Jean, chairman, president, and CEO of Grupo Televisa, gets input from many different people before setting company goals and then turns over the planning for achieving the goals to various executives. In each of these situations, planning is done a little differently. How an organization plans can best be understood by looking at who does the planning. In the traditional approach, planning is done entirely by top-level managers who often are assisted by a formal planning department, a group of planning specialists whose sole responsibility is to help write the various organizational plans. Under this approach, plans developed by top-level managers flow down through other organizational levels, much like the traditional approach to goal-setting. As they flow down through the organization, the plans are tailored to the particular needs of each level. Although this approach makes managerial planning thorough, systematic, and coordinated, all too often the focus is on developing “the plan,” a thick binder (or binders) full of meaningless information that’s stuck away on a shelf and never used by anyone for guiding or coordinating work efforts. In fact, in a survey of managers about formal top-down organizational planning processes, over 75 percent said that their company’s planning approach was unsatisfactory.23 A common complaint was that, “plans are documents that you prepare for the corporate planning staff and later forget.” Although this traditional top-down approach to planning is used by many organizations, it can be effective only if managers understand the importance of creating documents that organizational members actually use, not documents that look impressive but are never used. Another approach to planning is to involve more organizational members in the process. In this approach, plans aren’t handed down from one level to the next, but instead are developed by organizational members at the various levels and in the various work units to meet their specific needs. For instance, at Dell, employees from production, supply management, and channel management meet weekly to make plans based on current product demand and supply. In addition, work teams set their own daily schedules and track their progress against those schedules. If a team falls behind, team members develop “recovery” plans to try to get back on schedule.24 When organizational members are more actively involved in planning, they see that the plans are more than just something written down on paper. They can actually see that the plans are used in directing and coordinating work. Contemporary Issues in Planning The second floor of the 21-story Hyundai Motor headquarters buzzes with data 24 hours a day. That’s where you’d find the company’s Global Command and Control Center (GCCC), which is modeled after the CNN newsroom with “dozens of computer screens relaying video and data keeping watch on Hyundai operations around the world.” Managers get information on parts shipments from suppliers to factories. Cameras watch assembly lines and “keep a close watch on Hyundai’s giant Ulsan, Korea, plant, the world’s largest integrated auto CHAPTER 8 | FOUNDATIONS OF PLANNING factory” looking for competitors’ spies and any hints of labor unrest. The GCCC also keeps tabs on the company’s R&D activities in Europe, Japan, and North America. Hyundai can identify problems in an instant and react quickly. The company is all about aggressiveness and speed and is representative of how a successful twenty-first-century company approaches planning.25 We conclude this chapter by addressing two contemporary issues in planning. Specifically, we’re going to look at planning effectively in dynamic environments and then at how managers can use environmental scanning, especially competitive intelligence. How Can Managers Plan Effectively in Dynamic Environments? As we saw in Chapter 2, the external environment is continually changing. For instance, cloud computing storage is revolutionizing all kinds of industries from financial services to health care to engineering.26 Social networking sites are being used by companies to connect with customers, employees, and potential employees. Amounts spent on eating out instead of cooking at home are predicted to decline. And experts believe that China and India are transforming the twenty-first-century global economy. How can managers effectively plan when the external environment is continually changing? We already discussed uncertain environments as one of the contingency factors that affect the types of plans managers develop. Because dynamic environments are more the norm than the exception, let’s look at how managers can effectively plan in such environments. In an uncertain environment, managers should develop plans that are specific, but flexible. Although this may seem contradictory, it’s not. To be useful, plans need some specificity, but the plans should not be set in stone. Managers need to recognize that planning is an ongoing process. The plans serve as a road map although the destination may change due to dynamic market conditions. They should be ready to change directions if environmental conditions warrant. This flexibility is particularly important as plans are implemented. Managers need to stay alert to environmental changes that may impact implementation and respond as needed. Keep in mind, also, that even when the environment is highly uncertain, it’s important to continue formal planning in order to see any effect on organizational performance. It’s the persistence in planning that contributes to significant performance improvement. Why? It seems that, as with most activities, managers “learn to plan” and the quality of their planning improves when they continue to do it.27 Finally, make the organizational hierarchy flatter to effectively plan in dynamic environments. This means allowing lower organizational levels to set goals and develop plans because there’s little time for goals and plans to flow down from the top. Managers should teach their employees how to set goals and to plan and then trust them to do it. And you need look no further than Bangalore, India, to find a company that effectively understands this. Just a decade ago, Wipro Limited was “an anonymous conglomerate selling cooking oil and personal computers, mostly in India.” Today, it’s a $6 billion-a-year global company with much of its business coming from information-technology services.28 Accenture, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, and the big U.S. accounting firms know all too well the competitive threat Wipro represents. Not only are Wipro’s employees economical, they’re knowledgeable and skilled. And they play an important role in the company’s planning. Because the information services industry is continually changing, employees are taught to analyze situations and to define the scale and scope of a client’s problems in order to offer the best solutions. These employees are the ones on the front line with the clients and it’s their responsibility to establish what to do and how to do it. It’s an approach that positions Wipro for success no matter how the industry changes. formal planning department A group of planning specialists whose sole responsibility is helping to write organizational plans 213 You can be a better planner by not being far-sighted. Don’t lose sight of what is happening right now by planning too far in the future. If you take care of the now, the long term will take care of itself. Be prepared to react and adjust to short-term changes and fluctuations in the economy and in your industry. 214 PART THREE | PLANNING Scanning the environment helps Toyota Motor Corporation managers detect emerging trends that influence the company’s future plans. Based on trends in computing and communications technology plus demographic trends such as a rapidly aging population and a decreasing birthrate in Japan and other developing nations, Toyota sees robotics as a key business in coming years. Its violin-playing robot, with 17 joints in each hand and arm, has the precise control and coordination to achieve humanlike agility for performing domestic chores like folding laundry and medical tasks such as dispensing medicine. Toyota and competitors such as Honda and Hitachi are racing to build robots that will serve the needs of the elderly in Japan, where 40 percent of the population is expected to be older than 65 by 2055, and in other global markets. How Can Managers Use Environmental Scanning? Crammed into a small Shanghai apartment that houses four generations of a Chinese family, Indra Nooyi, Chairman and CEO of PepsiCo Inc., asked the inhabitants several questions about “China’s rapid development, their shopping habits, and how they feel about Western brands.” This visit was part of an “immersion” tour of China for Ms. Nooyi, who hopes to strengthen PepsiCo’s business in emerging markets. She said, “I wanted to look at how people live, how they eat, what the growth possibilities are.”29 The information gleaned from her research—a prime example of environmental scanning up close and personal—will help in establishing PepsiCo’s future goals and plans. A manager’s analysis of the external environment may be improved by environmental scanning, which involves screening information to detect emerging trends. One of the fastest-growing forms of environmental scanning is competitor intelligence, which is gathering information about competitors that allows managers to anticipate competitors’ actions rather than merely react to them.30 It seeks basic information about competitors: Who are they? What are they doing? How will what they’re doing affect us? Many who study competitive intelligence suggest that much of the competitor-related information managers need to make crucial strategic decisions is available and accessible to the public.31 In other words, competitive intelligence isn’t corporate espionage. Advertisements, promotional materials, press releases, reports filed with government agencies, annual reports, want ads, newspaper reports, information on the Internet, and industry studies are readily accessible sources of information. Specific information on an industry and associated organizations is increasingly available through electronic databases. Managers can literally tap into this wealth of competitive information by purchasing access to databases. Attending trade shows and debriefing your own sales staff also can be good sources of information on competitors. In addition, many organizations even regularly buy competitors’ products and ask their own employees to evaluate them to learn about new technical innovations.32 In a changing global business environment, environmental scanning and obtaining competitive intelligence can be quite complex, especially since information must be gathered environmental scanning competitor intelligence Screening information to detect emerging trends Gathering information about competitors that allows managers to anticipate competitors’ actions rather than merely react to them CHAPTER 8 | FOUNDATIONS OF PLANNING 215 from around the world. However, one thing managers could do is subscribe to news services that review newspapers and magazines from around the globe and provide summaries to client companies. Managers do need to be careful about the way information, especially competitive intelligence, is gathered to prevent any concerns about whether it’s legal or ethical.33 For instance, Starwood Hotels recently sued Hilton Hotels alleging that two former employees stole trade secrets and helped Hilton develop a new line of luxury, trendy hotels designed to appeal to a young demographic.34 The court filing said, “This is the clearest imaginable case of corporate espionage, theft of trade secrets, unfair competition, and computer fraud.” Competitive intelligence becomes illegal corporate spying when it involves the theft of proprietary materials or trade secrets by any means. The Economic Espionage Act makes it a crime in the United States to engage in economic espionage or to steal a trade secret. Difficult decisions about competitive intelligence arise because often there’s a fine line between what’s considered legal and ethical and what’s considered legal but unethical. Although the top manager at one competitive intelligence firm contends that 99.9 percent of intelligence gathering is legal, there’s no question that some people or companies will go to any lengths— some unethical—to get information about competitors.35 Let’s Get Real: What Would You Do? My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma, page 204 A crisis the magnitude of the Haitian earthquake requires a global response, which is exactly what happened. The timing of the disaster on a holiday weekend was unfortunate, but no one can fault the herculean efforts of the WFP in their response to the crisis. In the shadow of Hurricane Katrina, agencies such as the WFP were intensely scrutinized and obviously had fairly well laid out action plans for disasters such as this. That being said, no amount of planning can prepare for the devastation that the relief teams found in Haiti. Getting the military involved from the outset was a key factor. They are at a constant state of readiness and are trained first responders. The military command should take control of damage assessment, procuring local equipment, and mobilizing shipments of additional equipment necessary to get runways repaired and open and seaports in working order. The WFP should immediately take the lead and begin centralizing food and relief supplies from the myriad of relief agencies across the country and begin scheduling shipments accordingly. In general, the actual relief operation was impressive and efficient and argues well for the effectiveness of good planning. Chuck Pick President Chuck’s Parking Service, Inc. Sherman Oaks, CA PREPARING FOR: Exams/Quizzes CHAPTER SUMMARY by Learning Outcomes LEARNING OUTCOME 8.1 Define the nature and purposes of planning. Planning involves defining the organization’s goals, establishing an overall strategy for achieving those goals, and developing plans for organizational work activities. The four purposes of planning include providing direction, reducing uncertainty, minimizing waste and redundancy, and establishing the goals or standards used in controlling. Studies of the planning-performance relationship have concluded that formal planning is associated with positive financial performance, for the most part; it’s more important to do a good job of planning and implementing the plans than doing more extensive planning; the external environment is usually the reason why companies that plan don’t achieve high levels of performance; and the planning-performance relationship seems to be influenced by the planning time frame. LEARNING OUTCOME 8.2 Classify the types of goals organizations might have and the plans they use. Goals are desired outcomes. Plans are documents that outline how goals are going to be met. Goals might be strategic or financial and they might be stated or real. Strategic plans apply to the entire organization while operational plans encompass a particular functional area. Long-term plans are those with a time frame beyond three years. Short-term plans cover one year or less. Specific plans are clearly defined and leave no room for interpretation. Directional plans are flexible and set out general guidelines. A single-use plan is a one-time plan designed to meet the needs of a unique situation. Standing plans are ongoing plans that provide guidance for activities performed repeatedly. LEARNING OUTCOME 8.3 Compare and contrast approaches to goal setting and planning. In traditional goal setting, goals are set at the top of the organization and then become subgoals for each organizational area. MBO (management by objectives) is a process of setting mutually agreed-upon goals and using those goals to evaluate employee performance. Well-written goals have six characteristics: (1) written in terms of outcomes, (2) measurable and quantifiable, (3) clear as to time frame, (4) challenging but attainable, (5) written down, and (6) communicated to all organizational members who need to know them. Goal setting involves these steps: review the organization’s mission; evaluate available resources; determine the goals individually or with input from others; write down the goals and communicate them to all who need to know them; and review results and change goals as needed. The contingency factors that affect planning include the manager’s level in the organization, the degree of environmental uncertainty, and the length of future commitments. The two main approaches to planning include the traditional approach, which has plans developed by top managers that flow down through other organizational levels and which may use a formal planning department. The other approach is to involve more organizational members in the planning process. LEARNING OUTCOME 8.4 Discuss contemporary issues in planning. One contemporary planning issue is planning in dynamic environments, which usually means developing plans that are specific but flexible. Also, it’s important to continue planning even when the environment is highly uncertain. Finally, because there’s little time in a dynamic environment for goals and plans to flow down from the top, lower organizational levels should be allowed to set goals and develop plans. Another contemporary planning issue involves using environmental scanning to help do a better analysis of the external environment. One form of environmental scanning, competitive intelligence, can be especially helpful in finding out what competitors are doing. 216 CHAPTER 8 | FOUNDATIONS OF PLANNING 8.1 8.4 REVIEW AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. Explain what studies have shown about the relationship between planning and performance. 2. Discuss the contingency factors that affect planning. 3. Describe how managers can effectively plan in today’s dynamic environment. 4. Will planning become more or less important to managers in the future? Why? 5. If planning is so crucial, why do some managers choose not to do it? What would you tell these managers? 6. Explain how planning involves making decisions today that will have an impact later. 7. How might planning in a not-for-profit organization such as the American Cancer Society differ from planning in a for-profit organization such as Coca-Cola? 8. What types of planning do you do in your personal life? Describe these plans in terms of being (a) strategic or operational, (b) short term or long term, and (c) specific or directional. 9. The late Peter Drucker, an eminent management author, coined the SMART format for setting goals back in 1954: S (specific), M (measurable), A (attainable), R (relevant), and T (time-bound). Are these still relevant today? Discuss. 10. Many companies have a goal of becoming more environmentally sustainable. One of the most important steps they can take is controlling paper waste. Choose a company—any type, any size. You’ve been put in charge of creating a program to do this for your company. Set goals and develop plans. Prepare a report for your boss (that is, your professor) outlining these goals and plans. ETHICS DILEMMA As companies prepared plans to keep their businesses operating if the H1N1 (swine) flu pandemic materialized, thorny issues arose. At one small business, for example, the boss sent two employees home on “indefinite leave” after the employees’ children’s school was closed down because of an H1N1 outbreak there. Neither of their children had flu symptoms, nor did the employees. Now they’re out of paid sick day leaves and are losing pay. At Procter & Gamble, executives asked company doctors whether it should try to secure a private stash of Tamiflu for its staff. One of the company’s medical leaders responded, “How ethical would it be if we were holding supplies that the general public didn’t have access to but badly needed?”36 What do you think? Is it ethical for a business to be overly cautious in protecting employees? Is it ethical for a company to protect its own employees at the expense of public protection? What would you do in this situation? SKILLS EXERCISE Steps in Practicing the Skill Developing Your Goal Setting Skill About the Skill Employees should have a clear understanding of what they’re attempting to accomplish. In addition, managers have the responsibility for seeing that this is done by helping employees set work goals. Setting goals is a skill every manager needs to develop. You can be more effective at setting goals if you use the following eight suggestions. 1. Identify an employee’s key job tasks. Goal setting begins by defining what it is that you want your employees to accomplish. The best source for this information is each employee’s job description. 2. Establish specific and challenging goals for each key task. Identify the level of performance expected of each employee. Specify the target toward which the employee is working. 217 218 PART THREE | PLANNING 3. Specify the deadlines for each goal. Putting deadlines on each goal reduces ambiguity. Deadlines, however, should not be set arbitrarily. Rather, they need to be realistic given the tasks to be completed. 4. Allow the employee to actively participate. When employees participate in goal setting, they’re more likely to accept the goals. However, it must be sincere participation. That is, employees must perceive that you are truly seeking their input, not just going through the motions. 5. Prioritize goals. When you give someone more than one goal, it’s important for you to rank the goals in order of importance. The purpose of prioritizing is to encourage the employee to take action and expend effort on each goal in proportion to its importance. 6. Rate goals for difficulty and importance. Goal setting should not encourage people to choose easy goals. Instead, goals should be rated for their difficulty and importance. When goals are rated, individuals can be given credit for trying difficult goals, even if they don’t fully achieve them. 7. Build in feedback mechanisms to assess goal progress. Feedback lets employees know whether their level of effort is sufficient to attain the goal. Feedback should be both self-generated and supervisor generated. In either case, feedback should be frequent and recurring. 8. Link rewards to goal attainment. It’s natural for employees to ask, “What’s in it for me?” Linking rewards to the achievement of goals will help answer that question. WORKING TOGETHER Team Exercise to the four-day system.37 Suppose that you are employed by a school district in San Antonio, Texas, that is going to move to a four-day week by the start of the next school year. What type of planning would need to be done as your school district embarked on this process? Identify three or four primary goals for accomplishing this action. Then, describe what plans would be needed to ensure that those goals are met. Form small groups of three to four individuals and read through the following scenario. Complete the work that’s called for. Be sure that your goals are well designed and that your plans are descriptive. Scenario Practicing the Skill 1. Where do you want to be in five years? Do you have specific five-year goals? Establish three goals you want to achieve in five years. Make sure these goals are specific, challenging, and measurable. 2. Set personal and academic goals you want to achieve by the end of this college term. Prioritize and rate them for difficulty. Facing dire budget predictions, many school districts are moving to a four-day week. Of nearly 15,000-plus districts nationwide, more than 100 in at least 17 states have moved MY TURN TO BE A MANAGER Practice setting goals for various aspects of your personal life such as academics, career preparation, family, hobbies, and so forth. Set at least two short-term goals and at least two long-term goals for each area. For these goals that you have set, write out plans for achieving those goals. Think in terms of what you will have to do to accomplish each. For instance, if one of your academic goals is to improve your grade-point average, what will you have to do to reach it? Write a personal mission statement. Although this may sound simple to do, it’s not going to be simple or easy. Our hope is that it will be something that you’ll want to keep, use, and revise when necessary, and that it will help you be the person you’d like to be and live the life you’d like to live. Start by doing some research on personal mission statements. There are some wonderful Web resources that can guide you. Good luck! Interview three managers about the types of planning they do. Ask them for suggestions on how to be a better planner. Write a report describing and comparing your findings. Choose two companies, preferably in different industries. Research the companies’ Web sites and find examples of goals that they have stated. (Hint: A company’s annual report is often a good place to start.) Evaluate these goals. Are they well-written? Rewrite those that don’t exhibit the characteristics of well-written goals so that they do. CHAPTER 8 | FOUNDATIONS OF PLANNING Steve’s and Mary’s suggested readings: Atul Gawande, The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right (Metropolitan Books, 2009); Peter F. Drucker, Management: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices (Harper Business, 1974); Peter F. Drucker, The Executive in Action; Managing for Results (Harper Business, 1967); and Peter F. Drucker, The Practice of Management (HarperCollins, 1954). What does it take to be a good planner? Do some research on this issue. As part of your research, talk to professors and other professionals. Make a bulleted list of suggestions. Be sure to cite your sources. In your own words, write down three things you learned in this chapter about being a good manager. Self-knowledge can be a powerful learning tool. Go to mymanagementlab.com and complete these self-assessment exercises: What’s My Attitude Toward Achievement? What Are My Course Performance Goals? What Time of Day Am I Most Productive? and How Good Am I at Personal Planning? Using the results of your assessments, identify personal strengths and weaknesses. What will you do to reinforce your strengths and improve your weaknesses? CASE APPLICATION Icelandic Volcano, 1; Global Commerce, 0 his volcano has a funny name—Eyjafjallajokull—but its impact T was not so funny to global businesses, both large and small.38 When it erupted on April 14, 2010, the plume of volcanic ash that spread across thousands of miles disrupted air travel and global commerce for a number of days. As thousands of flights were canceled across Europe, tens of thousands of air travelers couldn’t get to their destination. For example, Marthin De Beer, vice president of emerging technologies at Cisco Systems, was headed to Oslo to discuss the final aspects of its acquisition of Tandberg, a Norwegian teleconferencing company. However, when his flight was canceled, he and Tandberg’s CEO, Fredrik Halvorsen, used their merged companies’ equipment to hold a virtual press conference. Other businesses weren’t as lucky, especially those with high-value, highly perishable products such as berries, fresh fish and flowers, and medicines and pharmaceuticals. African farmers, European fresh-produce importers, and flower traders from Kenya to the Netherlands found their busi- A flight information screen at an airport outside of Paris lists commercial airline cancellations in cities across northern Europe as a result of the drifting plume of ash that spread thousands of miles from the Icelandic volcano eruption, disrupting air travel and global commerce. nesses threatened by the air traffic shutdown. Even manufacturers were affected. For instance, BMW had to scale back work hours and had even prepared for possibly shutting down production at its Spartanburg, South Carolina, plant because it depended on trans-Atlantic flights to bring transmissions and other components from German factories by air. A spokesperson at another automobile company, Mercedes-Benz, said, “There has been disruption in our parts supply. We expect that there may be shortages of some parts or delays in some instances.” 219 220 PART THREE | PLANNING Discussion Questions 1. Could a company even plan for this type of situation? If yes, how? If not, why not? 2. Would goals be useful in this type of situation? What types of goals might a manufacturing company like BMW have in such a situation? How about a global airline? How about a small flower grower in Kenya? 3. What types of plans could companies use in this type of situation? Explain why you think these plans would be important. 4. What lessons about planning can managers learn from this crisis? CASE APPLICATION Building a Future abitat for Humanity is a nonprofit, ecumenical Christian housing ministry whose mission is to “eliminate H poverty and homelessness from the world and to make decent shelter a matter of conscience and action.”39 The organization was founded by Millard and Linda Fuller in 1976 in Americus, Georgia. More than 300,000 Habitat houses have been built, sheltering more than 1.5 million people around the world. These houses can be found in all 50 states of the United States, the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico, and more than 90 countries around the world. “Thousands of low-income families have found new hope in this form of affordable housing.” Habitat’s approach is simple. Families in need of decent housing apply to local Habitat for Humanity affiliates. Homeowners are chosen based on their level of need, their willingness to become partners in the program, and their ability to repay the loan. And that’s the unique thing about Habitat’s approach. It’s not a giveaway program. Families chosen to become homeowners have to make a down payment and monthly mortgage payments, and invest hundreds of hours of their own labor into building their Habitat home and helping build other Habitat houses. Habitat volunteers provide labor and donations of money and materials as well. (Maybe some of you have helped in a Habitat build.) In 2009, J. Ronald Terwilliger, a former CEO of housing developer Trammell Crow Residential Co., who also has been a long-time member of Habitat’s board of directors, made a $100 million commitment to Habitat. He says that “through his work with Habitat and in the private sector, he’s witnessed the depths of poverty, seeing people living in cardboard shacks and unspeakable filth, as well as the struggle for middle-class families to find affordable housing.” According to the Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University, “It’s one of the largest gifts in recent years to a group devoted to social services.” Terwilliger’s gift is intended to give people a helping hand toward a decent, safe clean home. And it’s intended to send a message to other philanthropists to “step up their giving.” As for Habitat, its CEO, Jonathan Reckford, said, “This is a chance to have a really deep impact.” Having that type of impact when the needs now are greater than ever is a definite planning challenge for the organization and its managers. CHAPTER 8 | FOUNDATIONS OF PLANNING Discussion Questions 1. What role do you think goals would play in planning for the wise use of this gift? List some goals you think might be important. (Make sure these goals have the characteristics of well-written goals.) 2. What types of plans would be needed in wisely using this gift? (For instance, long-term or short-term, or both?) Explain why you think these plans would be important. 3. What contingency factors might affect the planning Habitat executives have to do for the wise use of this gift? How might those contingency factors affect the planning? 4. What planning challenges do you think Habitat executives face with getting the most use out of this gift? How should they cope with those challenges? 221 9 chapter Let’s Get Real: Meet the Manager Sid Gokhale President Dowden Custom Media Montvale, NJ MY JOB: You’ll be hearing more from this real manager throughout the chapter. I’m the president of a strategic health care communications company. BEST PART OF MY JOB: Working with a diverse group of people and tapping into their expertise and talents. You need to leverage your employees’ strengths. I know that I’m not an expert in all aspects of the business, which is why we have specialists in editorial, design, Internet technology, and project management—all working toward a common goal. Strategic Management 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 Define strategic management and explain why it’s important. page 224 Explain what managers do during the six steps of the strategic management process. page 226 Describe the three types of corporate strategies. page 228 Describe competitive advantage and the competitive strategies organizations use to get it. page 231 Discuss current strategic management issues. page 234 LEARNING OUTCOMES WORST PART OF MY JOB: To say no, especially because of forces beyond your control. You always want to go the extra mile to please your stakeholders, who include your employees and customers. When you can’t because of environmental factors or other limitations, it’s tough. BEST MANAGEMENT ADVICE EVER RECEIVED: Listen first, speak later. In order to understand the market, your customers, and your employees, you need to hear what they have to say and then work toward crafting a solution for their needs. 223 A Manager’s Dilemma Shut Up Kanye (published soon after “Connally taps a network of 1,000 Flash developers, the MTV VMAs) and Where’s the publishing a new game every day and 12 on Fri- Naughty Governor? (published just days.” Those developers are found globally from after South Carolina governor Mark Canada to India. Having access to such a globally Sanford admitted to having an affair) connected network is how the company is able to re- are just two of the online games spond almost overnight to current events like Kanye’s offered by MTV Network’s subsidiary outburst at the VMAs and Governor Sanford’s affair AddictingGames.1 disclosure. As vice president of Addicting- Now, Connelly is overseeing a major strategic Games, the largest free online-games change—bringing those online games to the site for teens, Kate Connally is respon- iPhone. She said, “Media companies need to pro- sible for managing the subsidiary that vide experiences wherever their audiences are, and was acquired by MTV Networks in the iPhone is really where we’re seeing the audience 2005. Keeping 15.3 million unique go.” How could SWOT analysis help her? monthly visitors happy and coming back is a real challenge. To do so, What Would You Do? The importance of having good strategies can be seen by what Kate Connally has accomplished with AddictingGames. By recognizing game opportunities in current news stories and in new formats and formulating effective strategies to exploit these opportunities, her company has become the leader in online gaming. As she continues expanding access to those games, strategic management will continue to play an important role in the company’s ability to continue to be the most popular online games site. An underlying theme in this chapter is that effective strategies result in high organizational performance. 9.1 LEARNING OUTCOME Define strategic management and explain why it’s important. Strategic Management Vente-privee.com, one of Europe’s top e-tailers, is looking to expand in Europe, but not in the United States, where competition from outlet malls and discounters is too great. Facing intense pressure from users over privacy issues, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveiled a new set of controls to help people better understand what information they are sharing online. Charles Schwab, chairman and founder of his namesake financial services company, is worried about his customers, especially since his company’s success depends on his financial advisers’ ability to keep those customers “engaged” in equities markets. The private equity firm, C. Dean Metropoulos & Company, has reached an agreement to buy Pabst Blue Ribbon, a once-popular beer brand, with hopes of rebuilding its share in a competitive market.2 These are just a few of the business news stories from a single week, and each one is about a company’s strategies. Strategic management is very much a part of what managers do. In this section, we want to look at what strategic management is and why it’s important. What Is Strategic Management? The discount retail industry is a good place to see what strategic management is all about. Walmart and Kmart Corporation (now part of Sears Holdings) have battled for market dominance since 1962, the year both companies were founded. The two chains have other similarities: store atmosphere, names, markets served, and organizational purpose. Yet, Walmart’s performance (financial and otherwise) has far surpassed that of Kmart. Walmart is the world’s largest retailer and Kmart was the largest retailer ever to seek Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Why the difference in performance? Because 224 CHAPTER 9 | STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT 225 of different strategies and competitive abilities.3 Walmart has excelled by using strategic management effectively while Kmart has struggled by failing to use strategic management effectively. Strategic management is what managers do to develop the organization’s strategies. It’s an important task involving all the basic management functions—planning, organizing, leading, and controlling. What are an organization’s strategies? They’re the plans for how the organization will do whatever it’s in business to do, how it will compete successfully, and how it will attract and satisfy its customers in order to achieve its goals.4 One term often used in strategic management is business model, which simply is how a company is going to make money. It focuses on two things: (1) whether customers will value what the company is providing, and (2) whether the company can make any money doing that.5 For instance, Dell pioneered a new business model for selling computers to consumers directly online instead of selling through computer retailers like other manufacturers. Did customers “value” that? Absolutely! Did Dell make money doing it that way? Absolutely! As managers think about strategies, they need to think about the economic viability of their company’s business model. Why Is Strategic Management Important? In the summer of 2002, a British television show spin-off called American Idol became one of the biggest shows in American television history. Nine seasons later, it’s still the most-watched show on television although its audience has declined for four seasons. However, the show’s executive producer said, “If we’re smart about it, there’s no reason why ‘Idol’ wouldn’t keep going. Just look at ‘Price is Right.’ It’s been on for over 35 years.”6 The managers behind Idol seem to understand the importance of strategic management as they’ve developed and exploited every aspect of the Idol business—the television show, the music, the concerts, and all the other associated licensed products. Now, their challenge is to keep the franchise a strong presence in the market by making strategic changes. Why is strategic management so important? There are three reasons. The most significant one is that it can make a difference in how well an organization performs. Why do some Wang Chuanfu recognizes the importance of strategic management to improve organizational performance. Chuanfu is the CEO of BYD, a firm he started in 1995 in Shenzhen, China, to make and sell rechargeable batteries for computers. Today BYD is a top battery supplier to both computer and cell phone makers. Recognizing an opportunity to build profits by entering a new market, Chuanfu bought a struggling car company in China and applied his core technology of rechargeable batteries to producing electric cars. Chuanfu, shown here with his e6 fuel-efficient and environmentally friendly electric car, hopes to capture a good part of the worldwide global market for electric cars that’s predicted to be as big as 10 million cars per year by 2016. strategic management strategies business model What managers do to develop the organization’s strategies The plans for how the organization will do what it’s in business to do, how it will compete successfully, and how it will attract and satisfy its customers in order to achieve its goals How a company is going to make money 226 PART THREE | PLANNING Managers need to know about strategic management because it’s the cornerstone for a company to move forward. You have to know where you’ll be in 5, 10, 20 years—and anticipate change and be innovative. 9.2 LEARNING OUTCOME Explain what managers do during the six steps of the strategic management process. businesses succeed and others fail, even when faced with the same environmental conditions? (Remember our Walmart and Kmart example.) Research has found a generally positive relationship between strategic planning and performance.7 In other words, it appears that organizations that use strategic management do have higher levels of performance. And that fact makes it pretty important for managers! Another reason it’s important has to do with the fact that managers in organizations of all types and sizes face continually changing situations (as we discussed in Chapter 6). They cope with this uncertainty by using the strategic management process to examine relevant factors and decide what actions to take. For instance, as business executives across a wide spectrum of industries coped with the global recession, they focused on making their strategies more flexible. At Office Depot, for example, store managers throughout the company told CEO Steve Odland that cash-strapped consumers no longer wanted to buy pens or printer paper in bulk. So the company created special displays promoting single Sharpie pens and introduced five-ream packages of paper, half the size of the normal big box of paper.8 Finally, strategic management is important because organizations are complex and diverse. Each part needs to work together toward achieving the organization’s goals; strategic management helps do this. For example, with more than 2.1 million employees worldwide working in various departments, functional areas, and stores, Walmart Stores, Inc., uses strategic management to help coordinate and focus employees’ efforts on what’s important as determined by its goals. Today, both business organizations and not-for-profit organizations use strategic management. For instance, the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) is locked in competitive battles with overnight package delivery companies, telecommunications companies’ e-mail and text messaging services, and private mailing facilities. In 2006, 213 billion pieces of mail were handled by the postal service. In 2009, that total had dropped to 177 billion, a decline of almost 17 percent. John Potter, USPS’s CEO (the U.S. Postmaster General), is using strategic management to come up with a response. One possible action plan, which many critics consider drastic, is discontinuing Saturday mail delivery. However, some strategic changes are needed as the USPS faces losses of $238 billion over the next decade.9 Strategic management will continue to be important to its operation. Check out the organization’s Vision 2013, which outlines its internal plan for the future.10 Although strategic management in not-for-profits hasn’t been as well researched as it has in for-profit organizations, we know it’s important for these organizations as well. The Strategic Management Process The strategic management process (see Exhibit 9-1) is a six-step process that encompasses strategy planning, implementation, and evaluation. Although the first four steps describe the planning that must take place, implementation and evaluation are just as important! Even the best strategies can fail if management doesn’t implement or evaluate them properly. EXHIBIT 9-1 Strategic Management Process External Analysis • Opportunities • Threats Identify the organization's current mission, goals, and strategies SWOT Analysis Internal Analysis • Strengths • Weaknesses Formulate Strategies Implement Strategies Evaluate Results CHAPTER 9 | STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT Step 1: Identifying the Organization’s Current Mission, Goals, and Strategies Every organization needs a mission—a statement of its purpose. Defining the mission forces managers to identify what it’s in business to do. For instance, the mission of Avon is “To be the company that best understands and satisfies the product, service, and selffulfillment needs of women on a global level.” The mission of Facebook is “a social utility that connects you with the people around you.” The mission of the National Heart Foundation of Australia is to “reduce suffering and death from heart, stroke, and blood vessel disease in Australia.” These statements provide clues to what these organizations see as their purpose. What should a mission statement include? Exhibit 9-2 describes some typical components. Step 2: Doing an External Analysis What impact might the following trends have for businesses? With the passage of the national health care legislation, every big restaurant chain will now be required to post calorie information on their menus and drive-through signs. Cell phones are now used by customers more for data transmittal and retrieval than for phone calls. The share of new high-school graduates enrolled in college hit a record high in 2009 and continues to climb.11 We described the external environment in Chapter 2 as an important constraint on a manager’s actions. Analyzing that environment is a critical step in the strategic management process. Managers do an external analysis so they know, for instance, what the competition is doing, what pending legislation might affect the organization, or what the labor supply is like in locations where it operates. In an external analysis, managers should examine the economic, demographic, political/legal, sociocultural, technological, and global components to see the trends and changes. Once they’ve analyzed the environment, managers need to pinpoint opportunities that the organization can exploit and threats that it must counteract or buffer against. Opportunities are positive trends in the external environment; threats are negative trends. EXHIBIT 9-2 Customers: Who are the firm’s customers? Markets: Where does the firm compete geographically? Concern for survival, growth, and profitability: Is the firm committed to growth and financial stability? Philosophy: What are the firm’s basic beliefs, values, and ethical priorities? Concern for public image: How responsive is the firm to societal and environmental concerns? Products or services: What are the firm’s major products or services? Technology: Is the firm technologically current? Self-concept: What are the firm’s major competitive advantage and core competencies? Concern for employees: Are employees a valuable asset of the firm? Source: Based on F. David, Strategic Management, 13th ed. (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2011), p. 51. strategic management process opportunities A six-step process that encompasses strategic planning, implementation, and evaluation Positive trends in the external environment mission Negative trends in the external environment A statement of an organization’s purpose threats Components of a Mission Statement 227 228 PART THREE | PLANNING Step 3: Doing an Internal Analysis Here’s why managers need to do SWOT analysis: You can’t dive into something without first examining your company’s capacity for change and without a thorough understanding of what you’re good at and where you’ll need help. Now we move to the internal analysis, which provides important information about an organization’s specific resources and capabilities. An organization’s resources are its assets—financial, physical, human, and intangible—that it uses to develop, manufacture, and deliver products to its customers. They’re “what” the organization has. On the other hand, its capabilities are its skills and abilities in doing the work activities needed in its business—“how” it does its work. The major value-creating capabilities of the organization are known as its core competencies.12 Both resources and core competencies determine the organization’s competitive weapons. After completing an internal analysis, managers should be able to identify organizational strengths and weaknesses. Any activities the organization does well or any unique resources that it has are called strengths. Weaknesses are activities the organization doesn’t do well or resources it needs but doesn’t possess. The combined external and internal analyses are called the SWOT analysis , which is an analysis of the organization’s strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. After completing the SWOT analysis, managers are ready to formulate appropriate strategies—that is, strategies that (1) exploit an organization’s strengths and external opportunities, (2) buffer or protect the organization from external threats, or (3) correct critical weaknesses. Step 4: Formulating Strategies As managers formulate strategies, they should consider the realities of the external environment and their available resources and capabilities in order to design strategies that will help an organization achieve its goals. The three main types of strategies managers will formulate include corporate, competitive, and functional. We’ll describe each shortly. Step 5: Implementing Strategies Once strategies are formulated, they must be implemented. No matter how effectively an organization has planned its strategies, performance will suffer if the strategies aren’t implemented properly. Step 6: Evaluating Results The final step in the strategic management process is evaluating results. How effective have the strategies been at helping the organization reach its goals? What adjustments are necessary? After assessing the results of previous strategies and determining that changes were needed, Ursula Burns, Xerox’s CEO, made strategic adjustments to regain market share and improve her company’s bottom line. The company cut jobs, sold assets, and reorganized management. (See Leader Who Made a Difference box on p. 230.) LEARNING OUTCOME Describe the three types of corporate strategies. 9.3 Corporate Strategies As we said earlier, organizations use three types of strategies: corporate, competitive, and functional. (See Exhibit 9-3.) Top-level managers typically are responsible for corporate strategies, middle-level managers for competitive strategies, and lower-level managers for the functional strategies. In this section, we’ll look at corporate strategies. What Is Corporate Strategy? A corporate strategy is one that determines what businesses a company is in or wants to be in, and what it wants to do with those businesses. It’s based on the mission and goals of the organization and the roles that each business unit of the organization will play. We can see both of these aspects with PepsiCo, for instance. Its mission: To be the world’s premier consumer products company focused on convenient foods and beverages. It pursues that mission with a CHAPTER 9 | STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT 229 EXHIBIT 9-3 Competitive Functional Types of Organizational Strategies Multibusiness Corporation Corporate Research and Development Strategic Business Unit 1 Strategic Business Unit 2 Strategic Business Unit 3 Manufacturing Marketing Human Resources Finance corporate strategy that has put it in different businesses including PepsiCo Americas Beverages (which includes Pepsi, Gatorade, and other beverages), PepsiCo Americas Foods (which includes Frito-Lay North America, Quaker Foods North America, and Latin American Foods), and PepsiCo International (which includes all PepsiCo’s other international products). The other part of corporate strategy is when top managers decide what to do with those businesses: grow them, keep them the same, or renew them. What Are the Types of Corporate Strategy? The three main types of corporate strategies are growth, stability, and renewal. Let’s look at each type. GROWTH. Even though Walmart is the world’s largest retailer, it continues to grow internationally and in the United States. A growth strategy is when an organization expands the number of markets served or products offered, either through its current business(es) or through new business(es). Because of its growth strategy, an organization may increase revenues, number of employees, or market share. Organizations grow by using concentration, vertical integration, horizontal integration, or diversification. An organization that grows using concentration focuses on its primary line of business and increases the number of products offered or markets served in this primary business. For instance, Beckman Coulter, Inc., a Fullerton, California-based organization with annual revenues over $3.2 billion, has used concentration to become one of the world’s largest medical diagnostics and research equipment companies. Another example of a company using concentration is Bose Corporation of Framingham, Massachusetts, which focuses on developing innovative audio products and has become one of the world’s leading manufacturers of speakers for home entertainment, automotive, and pro audio markets with sales of more than $2 billion. A company also might choose to grow by vertical integration, either backward, forward, or both. In backward vertical integration, the organization becomes its own supplier so it can control its inputs. For instance, eBay owns an online payment business that helps it provide more secure transactions and control one of its most critical processes. In forward vertical integration, the organization becomes its own distributor and is able to control its outputs. For example, Apple has more than 287 retail stores worldwide to distribute its product. In horizontal integration, a company grows by combining with competitors. For instance, French cosmetics giant L’Oreal acquired The Body Shop. Another example is Live Nation, resources strengths corporate strategy An organization’s assets that are used to develop, manufacture, and deliver products to its customers Any activities the organization does well or any unique resources that it has An organizational strategy that determines what businesses a company is in or wants to be in, and what it wants to do with those businesses capabilities Activities the organization does not do well or resources it needs but does not possess An organization’s skills and abilities in doing the work activities needed in its business core competencies The organization’s major value-creating capabilities that determine its competitive weapons weaknesses SWOT analysis An analysis of the organization’s strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats growth strategy A corporate strategy that’s used when an organization wants to expand the number of markets served or products offered, either through its current business(es) or through new business(es) 230 PART THREE | PLANNING the largest concert promoter in the United States, which combined operations with competitor HOB Entertainment, the opwoman to lead a Fortune 500 erator of the House of Blues Clubs. Horizontal integration has company.13 Ursula Burns, who been used in a number of industries in the last few years— joined Xerox as a summer engifinancial services, consumer products, airlines, department neering intern more than 30 years stores, and software, among others. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission usually scrutinizes these combinations closely to ago, has a reputation for being see if consumers might be harmed by decreased competition. bold. As a mechanical engineer, Other countries may have similar restrictions. For instance, the she got noticed at Xerox because European Commission, the “watchdog” for the European she wasn’t afraid to speak up Union, conducted an in-depth investigation into Unilever’s acquisition of the body and laundry care units of Sara Lee. bluntly in a culture that’s known Finally, an organization can grow through diversification, more for being polite, courteous, either related or unrelated. Related diversification happens when and discreet than for being outspoken. But that bold approach is serving Burns a company combines with other companies in different, but rewell in a challenging environment. Just weeks after taking over as CEO, she lated, industries. For example, American Standard Cos., based in Piscataway, New Jersey, is in a variety of businesses includannounced the biggest deal in the firm’s history—a $6.4 billion acquisition of ing bathroom fixtures, air conditioning and heating units, Affiliated Computer Services, an outsourcing firm that most people had never plumbing parts, and pneumatic brakes for trucks. Although this heard of. Although the action was criticized, Burns recognized that Xerox needed mix of businesses seems odd, the company’s “strategic fit” is dramatic action. Her challenge at Xerox is crafting strategies that will help it the efficiency-oriented manufacturing techniques developed in its primary business of bathroom fixtures, which it has transprosper and be an industry leader in a digital age where change is continual. ferred to all its other businesses. Unrelated diversification is when a company combines with firms in different and unrelated industries. For instance, the Tata Group of India has businesses in chemicals, communications and IT, consumer products, energy, engineering, materials, and services. Again, an odd mix. But in this case, there’s no strategic fit among the businesses. She’s the first African American STABILITY. As the global recession dragged on and U.S. sales of candy and chocolate slowed down, Cadbury Schweppes—with almost half of its confectionary sales coming from chocolate—is maintaining things as they are. A stability strategy is a corporate strategy in which an organization continues to do what it is currently doing. Examples of this strategy include continuing to serve the same clients by offering the same product or service, maintaining market share, and sustaining the organization’s current business operations. The organization doesn’t grow, but doesn’t fall behind, either. RENEWAL. In 2009, Symantec lost $6.7 billion. Sprint-Nextel lost $2.4 billion, and many financial services and real-estate-related companies faced serious financial issues with huge losses. When an organization is in trouble, something needs to be done. Managers need to develop strategies, called renewal strategies, that address declining performance. The two main types of renewal strategies are retrenchment and turnaround strategies. A retrenchment strategy is a short-run renewal strategy used for minor performance problems. This strategy helps an organization stabilize operations, revitalize organizational resources and capabilities, and prepare to compete once again. When an organization’s problems are more serious, more drastic action—the turnaround strategy—is needed. Managers do two things for both renewal strategies: cut costs and restructure organizational operations. However, in a turnaround strategy, these measures are more extensive than in a retrenchment strategy. How Are Corporate Strategies Managed? When an organization’s corporate strategy encompasses a number of businesses, managers can manage this collection, or portfolio, of businesses using a tool called a corporate portfolio matrix. This matrix provides a framework for understanding diverse businesses and helps managers establish priorities for allocating resources.14 The first portfolio matrix—the BCG matrix—was developed by the Boston Consulting Group and introduced the idea that an organization’s various businesses could be evaluated and plotted using a 2 * 2 matrix CHAPTER 9 | STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT 231 EXHIBIT 9-4 High Low BCG Matrix Stars Question Marks Cash Cows Dogs Low Anticipated Growth Rate High Market Share (see Exhibit 9-4) to identify which ones offered high potential and which were a drain on organizational resources.15 The horizontal axis represents market share (low or high) and the vertical axis indicates anticipated market growth (low or high). A business unit is evaluated using a SWOT analysis and placed in one of the four categories. What are the strategic implications of the BCG matrix? The dogs should be sold off or liquidated as they have low market share in markets with low growth potential. Managers should “milk” cash cows for as much as they can, limit any new investment in them, and use the large amounts of cash generated to invest in stars and question marks with strong potential to improve market share. Heavy investment in stars will help take advantage of the market’s growth and help maintain high market share. The stars, of course, will eventually develop into cash cows as their markets mature and sales growth slows. The hardest decision for managers relates to the question marks. After careful analysis, some will be sold off and others strategically nurtured into stars. Competitive Strategies 9.4 A competitive strategy is a strategy for how an organization will compete in its business(es). For a small organization in only one line of business or a large organization that has not diversified into different products or markets, its competitive strategy describes how it will compete in its primary or main market. For organizations in multiple businesses, however, each business will have its own competitive strategy that defines its competitive advantage, the products or services it will offer, the customers it wants to reach, and the like. For example, the French company LVMH-Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA has different competitive strategies for its businesses, which include Donna Karan fashions, Louis Vuitton leather goods, Guerlain perfume, TAG Heuer watches, Dom Perignon champagne, and other luxury products. When an organization is in several different businesses, those single businesses that are independent and that have their own competitive strategies are referred to as strategic business units (SBUs). LEARNING OUTCOME Describe competitive advantage and the competitive strategies organizations use to get it. The Role of Competitive Advantage Michelin has mastered a complex technological process for making superior radial tires. CocaCola has created the world’s best and most powerful brand using specialized marketing and stability strategy BCG matrix strategic business unit (SBU) A corporate strategy in which an organization continues to do what it is currently doing A strategy tool that guides resource allocation decisions on the basis of market share and growth rate of SBUs The single independent businesses of an organization that formulate their own competitive strategies renewal strategy A corporate strategy designed to address declining performance competitive strategy An organizational strategy for how an organization will compete in its business(es) 232 PART THREE | PLANNING merchandising capabilities.16 The Ritz Carlton hotels have a unique ability to deliver personalized customer service. Each of these companies has created a competitive advantage. Developing an effective competitive strategy requires an understanding of competitive advantage, which is what sets an organization apart—that is, its distinctive edge.17 That distinctive edge can come from the organization’s core competencies by doing something that others cannot do or doing it better than others can do it. For example, Southwest Airlines has a competitive advantage because of its skills at giving passengers what they want—convenient and inexpensive air passenger service. Or competitive advantage can come from the company’s resources because the organization has something that its competitors do not have. For instance, Walmart’s state-of-the-art information system allows it to monitor and control inventories and supplier relations more efficiently than its competitors, which Walmart has turned into a cost advantage. QUALITY AS A COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE. When W. K. Kellogg started manufacturing his cornflake cereal in 1906, his goal was to provide his customers with a high-quality, nutritious product that was enjoyable to eat. That emphasis on quality is still important today. Every employee has a responsibility to maintain the high quality of Kellogg products. If implemented properly, quality can be a way for an organization to create a sustainable competitive advantage.18 That’s why many organizations apply quality management concepts in an attempt to set themselves apart from competitors. If a business is able to continuously improve the quality and reliability of its products, it may have a competitive advantage that can’t be taken away.19 SUSTAINING COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE. Every organization has resources (assets) and capabilities (how work gets done). So what makes some organizations more successful than others? Why do some professional baseball teams consistently win championships or draw large crowds? Why do some organizations have consistent and continuous growth in revenues and profits? Why do some colleges, universities, or departments experience continually increasing enrollments? Why do some companies consistently appear at the top of lists ranking the “best,” or the “most admired,” or the “most profitable”? The answer is that not every organization is able to effectively exploit its resources and to develop the core competencies that can provide it with a competitive advantage. And it’s not enough simply to create a competitive advantage. The organization must be able to sustain that advantage; that is, to keep its edge despite competitors’ actions or evolutionary changes in the industry. But that’s not easy to do! Market instabilities, new technology, and other changes can challenge managers’ attempts at creating a long-term, sustainable competitive advantage. However, by using strategic management, managers can better position their organizations to get a sustainable competitive advantage. Many important ideas in strategic management have come from the work of Michael Porter.20 One of his major contributions was explaining how managers can create a sustainable competitive advantage. An important part of doing this is an industry analysis, which is done using the five forces model. Kellogg has developed a competitive advantage by creating and maintaining high-quality products for more than a century. Quality management at Kellogg includes making each employee responsible for maintaining quality and conducting quality control tests of the company’s raw materials, processing, and packaging operations. Quality assurance personnel regularly visit suppliers’ plants to assure that proper sanitation procedures are followed and that raw materials meet Kellogg’s rigid specifications. A Quality Division at company headquarters establishes quality practices that are carried out by employees at the manufacturing facilities. CHAPTER 9 | STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT EXHIBIT 9-5 Five Forces Model New Entrants Threat of New Entrants Suppliers Bargaining Power of Buyers Intensity of Rivalry Among Current Competitors Buyers Bargaining Power of Suppliers Threat of Substitutes Substitutes Source: Based on M. E. Porter, Competitive Strategy: Techniques for Analyzing Industries and Competitors. New York: The Free Press, 1980. FIVE FORCES MODEL. In any industry, five competitive forces dictate the rules of competition. Together, these five forces (see Exhibit 9-5) determine industry attractiveness and profitability, which managers assess using these five factors: 1. Threat of new entrants. How likely is it that new competitors will come into the industry? 2. Threat of substitutes. How likely is it that other industries’ products can be substituted for our industry’s products? 3. Bargaining power of buyers. How much bargaining power do buyers (customers) have? 4. Bargaining power of suppliers. How much bargaining power do suppliers have? 5. Current rivalry. How intense is the rivalry among current industry competitors? Choosing a Competitive Strategy Once managers have assessed the five forces and done a SWOT analysis, they’re ready to select an appropriate competitive strategy—that is, one that fits the competitive strengths (resources and capabilities) of the organization and the industry it’s in. According to Porter, no firm can be successful by trying to be all things to all people. He proposed that managers select a strategy that will give the organization a competitive advantage, either from having lower costs than all other industry competitors or by being significantly different from competitors. When an organization competes on the basis of having the lowest costs (costs or expenses, not prices) in its industry, it’s following a cost leadership strategy. A low-cost leader is highly efficient. Overhead is kept to a minimum, and the firm does everything it can to cut costs. You won’t find expensive art or interior décor at offices of low-cost leaders. For example, at Walmart’s headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas, office furnishings are functional, not elaborate, maybe not what you’d expect for the world’s largest retailer. Although a low-cost leader doesn’t place a lot of emphasis on “frills,” its product must be perceived as comparable in quality to that offered by rivals or at least be acceptable to buyers. competitive advantage What sets an organization apart; its distinctive edge 233 234 PART THREE | PLANNING 21 by the numbers 21 percent more profitable— what studies have shown about companies that are information-technology-savvy. 25 29 percent of allegedly highperforming companies are actually remarkable performers. 46 percent of executives at smaller companies are likely to take a collaborative approach to developing strategy. 29 percent of executives at larger companies are likely to take a collaborative approach to developing strategy. 60 percent of executives believe that their employees are not prepared for future company growth. percent of respondents said that losing their job was their biggest concern during a corporate merger or acquisition. LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss current strategic management issues. Skills needed by a good strategic leader include: • Ability to listen • Determination • Flexibility • Able to affect change and buy-in from employees • Patience • Planning 9.5 A company that competes by offering unique products that are widely valued by customers is following a differentiation strategy. Product differences might come from exceptionally high quality, extraordinary service, innovative design, technological capability, or an unusually positive brand image. Practically any successful consumer product or service can be identified as an example of the differentiation strategy; for instance, Nordstrom (customer service); 3M Corporation (product quality and innovative design); Coach (design and brand image); and Apple (product design). Although these two competitive strategies are aimed at the broad market, the final type of competitive strategy—the focus strategy—involves a cost advantage (cost focus) or a differentiation advantage (differentiation focus) in a narrow segment or niche. Segments can be based on product variety, customer type, distribution channel, or geographical location. For example, Denmark’s Bang & Olufsen, whose revenues are over $527 million, focuses on high-end audio equipment sales. Whether a focus strategy is feasible depends on the size of the segment and whether the organization can make money serving that segment. What happens if an organization can’t develop a cost or a differentiation advantage? Porter called that being stuck in the middle and warned that’s not a good place to be. An organization becomes stuck in the middle when its costs are too high to compete with the low-cost leader or when its products and services aren’t differentiated enough to compete with the differentiator. Getting unstuck means choosing which competitive advantage to pursue and then doing so by aligning resource, capabilities, and core competencies. Although Porter said that you had to pursue either the low cost or the differentiation advantage to prevent being stuck in the middle, more recent research has shown that organizations can successfully pursue both a low cost and a differentiation advantage and achieve high performance.22 Needless to say, it’s not easy to pull off! You have to keep costs low and be truly differentiated. But companies such as Hewlett-Packard, FedEx, Intel, and CocaCola have been able to do it. Before we leave this section, we want to point out the final type of organizational strategy, the functional strategies, which are the strategies used by an organization’s various functional departments to support the competitive strategy. For example, when R. R. Donnelley & Sons Company, a Chicago-based printer, wanted to become more competitive and invested in high-tech digital printing methods, its marketing department had to develop new sales plans and promotional pieces, the production department had to incorporate the digital equipment in the printing plants, and the human resources department had to update its employee selection and training programs. We don’t cover specific functional strategies in this book because you’ll cover them in other business courses you take. Current Strategic Management Issues There’s no better example of the strategic challenges faced by managers in today’s environment than the recorded music industry. Overall sales of CDs have plummeted in the last decade and are down about 50 percent from their peak. Not only has this trend impacted the music companies, but it’s affected music retailers as well. “Retailers have been forced to adjust, often by devoting some shelf space to other products.” For instance, Best Buy, the national electronics retailer, decided to experiment with selling musical instruments. During spring 2010, the company opened its 100th musical instrument department. Other major music retailers, such as Walmart, have shifted selling space used for CDs to other departments. “At music specialty stores, however, diversification has become a matter of survival.” Managers are struggling to find strategies that will help their organizations succeed in such an environment. Many have had to shift into whole new areas of business.23 But it isn’t just the music industry that’s dealing with strategic challenges. Managers everywhere face increasingly intense global competition and high performance expectations by investors and customers. How have they responded to these new realities? In this section we look at three current strategic management issues including the need for strategic leadership, the need for strategic flexibility, and how managers design strategies to emphasize e-business, customer service, and innovation. CHAPTER 9 | STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT 235 The Need for Strategic Leadership Pablo Isa, CEO of Spain’s Inditex (owner of clothing chain Zara), is overseeing an aggressive expansion. The company is adding as many as 450 stores a year, including a three-level store on Chicago’s Michigan Avenue. With so much prime retail space available in the United States, Isa is exploiting the opportunity to negotiate better deals.24 An organization’s strategies are usually developed and overseen by its top managers. An organization’s top manager is typically the CEO (chief executive officer). This individual usually works with a top management team that includes other executive or senior managers such as a COO (chief operating officer), CFO (chief financial officer), CIO (chief information officer), and other individuals who may have various titles. Traditional descriptions of the CEO’s role in strategic management include being the “chief ” strategist, structural architect, and developer of the organization’s information/control systems.25 Other descriptions of the strategic role of the “chief executive” include key decision maker, visionary leader, political actor, monitor and interpreter of environment changes, and strategy designer.26 No matter how top management’s job is described, you can be certain that from their perspective at the organization’s upper levels, it’s like no other job in the organization. By definition, top managers are ultimately responsible for every decision and action of every organizational employee. One important role that top managers play is that of strategic leader. Organizational researchers study leadership in relation to strategic management because an organization’s top managers must provide effective strategic leadership. What is strategic leadership? It’s the ability to anticipate, envision, maintain flexibility, think strategically, and work with others in the organization to initiate changes that will create a viable and valuable future for the organization.27 How can top managers provide effective strategic leadership? Eight key dimensions have been identified.28 (See Exhibit 9-6.) These dimensions include determining the organization’s purpose or vision, exploiting and maintaining the organization’s core EXHIBIT 9-6 Effective Strategic Leadership Determining the organization’s purpose or vision Exploiting and maintaining the organization’s core competencies Establishing appropriately balanced organizational controls Emphasizing ethical organizational decisions and practices EFFECTIVE STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP Reframing prevailing views by asking penetrating questions and questioning assumptions Developing the organization’s human capital Creating and sustaining a strong organizational culture Creating and maintaining organizational relationships Sources: Based on J. P. Wallman, “Strategic Transactions and Managing the Future: A Druckerian Perspective,” Management Decision, vol. 48, no. 4, 2010, pp. 485–499; D. E. Zand, “Drucker’s Strategic Thinking Process: Three Key Techniques,” Strategy & Leadership, vol. 38, no. 3, 2010, pp. 23–28; and R. D. Ireland and M. A. Hitt, “Achieving and Maintaining Strategic Competitiveness in the 21st Century: The Role of Strategic Leadership,” Academy of Management Executive, February 1999, pp. 43–57. functional strategy strategic leadership The strategies used by an organization’s various functional departments to support the competitive strategy The ability to anticipate, envision, maintain flexibility, think strategically, and work with others in the organization to initiate changes that will create a viable and valuable future for the organization 236 PART THREE | PLANNING competencies, developing the organization’s human capital, creating and sustaining a strong organizational culture, creating and maintaining organizational relationships, reframing prevailing views by asking penetrating questions and questioning assumptions, emphasizing ethical organizational decisions and practices, and establishing appropriately balanced organizational controls. Each dimension encompasses an important part of the strategic management process. The Need for Strategic Flexibility Not surprisingly, the economic recession changed the way that many companies approached strategic planning.29 For instance, at Spartan Motors, a maker of specialty vehicles, managers used to draft a one-year strategic plan and a three-year financial plan, reviewing each one every financial quarter. However, CEO John Sztykiel said, “that relatively inflexible method bears some of the blame for Spartan’s sharp drop in sales and gross profit.” He also said that the company didn’t “respond quickly enough to shifting demand.” Now, the company uses a three-year strategic plan that the top management team updates every month. And at J.C. Penney Company, an ambitious five-year strategic growth plan rolled out in 2007 had to be put on hold as the economy floundered.30 In its place, CEO Mike Ullman III crafted a tentative “bridge” plan to guide the company. This plan worked as the company improved its profit margins and did not have to lay off any employees. Jürgen Schrempp, former CEO of Daimler AG, stated, “My principle always was . . . move as fast as you can and [if] you indeed make mistakes, you have to correct them. . . . It’s much better to move fast, and make mistakes occasionally, than move too slowly.”31 You wouldn’t think that smart individuals who are paid lots of money to manage organizations would make mistakes when it comes to strategic decisions. But even when managers use the strategic management process, there’s no guarantee that the chosen strategies will lead to positive outcomes. Reading any of the current business periodicals would certainly support this assertion! But the key is responding quickly when it’s obvious that the strategy isn’t working. In other words, they need strategic flexibility—that is, the ability to recognize major external changes, to quickly commit resources, and to recognize when a strategic decision isn’t working. Given the highly uncertain environment that managers face today, strategic flexibility seems absolutely necessary! Exhibit 9-7 provides suggestions for developing such strategic flexibility. Important Organizational Strategies for Today’s Environment ESPN.com gets more than 16 million unique users a month. 16 million! That’s almost twice the population of New York City. And its popular online business is just one of many businesses that ESPN is in. Originally founded as a television channel, ESPN is now into original programming, EXHIBIT 9-7 Developing Strategic Flexibility • • • • • • • • Encourage leadership unity by making sure everyone is on the same page. Keep resources fluid and move them as circumstances warrant. Have the right mindset to explore and understand issues and challenges. Know what’s happening with strategies currently being used by monitoring and measuring results. Encourage employees to be open about disclosing and sharing negative information. Get new ideas and perspectives from outside the organization. Have multiple alternatives when making strategic decisions. Learn from mistakes. Sources: Based on Y. L. Doz and M. Kosonen, “Embedding Strategic Agility: A Leadership Agenda for Accelerating Business Model Renewal,” Long Range Planning, April 2010, pp. 370–382; E. Lewis, D. Romanaggi, and A. Chapple, “Successfully Managing Change During Uncertain Times,” Strategic HR Review, vol. 9, no. 2, 2010, pp. 12–18; and K. Shimizu and M. Hitt, “Strategic Flexibility: Organizational Preparedness to Reverse Ineffective Strategic Decisions,” Academy of Management Executive, November 2004, pp. 44–59. CHAPTER 9 | STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT 237 radio, online, publishing, gaming, X games, ESPY awards, ESPN Zones, global, and is looking to move into more local sports coverage.32 Company president George Bodenheimer “runs one of the most successful and envied franchises in entertainment,” and obviously understands how to successfully manage its various strategies in today’s environment! We think three strategies are important in today’s environment: e-business, customer service, and innovation. e-BUSINESS STRATEGIES. Managers use e-business strategies to develop a sustainable competitive advantage.33 A cost leader can use e-business to lower costs in a variety of ways. For instance, it might use online bidding and order processing to eliminate the need for sales calls and to decrease sales force expenses; it could use Web-based inventory control systems that reduce storage costs; or it might use online testing and evaluation of job applicants. A differentiator needs to offer products or services that customers perceive and value as unique. For instance, a business might use Internet-based knowledge systems to shorten customer response times, provide rapid online responses to service requests, or automate purchasing and payment systems so that customers have detailed status reports and purchasing histories. Finally, because the focuser targets a narrow market segment with customized products, it might provide chat rooms or discussion boards for customers to interact with others who have common interests, design niche Web sites that target specific groups with specific interests, or use Web sites to perform standardized office functions such as payroll or budgeting. Research also has shown that an important e-business strategy might be a clicks-andbricks strategy. A clicks-and-bricks firm is one that uses both online (clicks) and traditional stand-alone locations (bricks).34 For example, Walgreen’s established an online site for ordering prescriptions, but some 90 percent of its customers who placed orders on the Web preferred to pick up their prescriptions at a nearby store rather than have them shipped to their home. So its “clicks-and-bricks” strategy has worked well! CUSTOMER SERVICE STRATEGIES. Companies emphasizing excellent customer service need strategies that cultivate that atmosphere from top to bottom. Such strategies involve giving customers what they want, communicating effectively with them, and providing employees with customer service training. Let’s look first at the strategy of giving customers what they want. It shouldn’t surprise you that an important customer service strategy is giving customers what they want, which is a major aspect of an organization’s overall marketing strategy. For Trader Joe’s customer service strategy centers on giving customers what they want and having an effective customer communication system. The specialty grocery uses face-toface conversations, listening to customers and getting their feedback. Spending most of their day on the retail floor, store managers are available to interact with customers, and the company gives them authority to set up their store to meet local needs. Trader Joe’s lets employees open products shoppers want to taste and encourages them to recommend products they like and to be honest about products they don’t like. At Trader Joe’s, a permanent store section that offers free samples also gives employees another chance to listen and respond to what customers want. strategic flexibility The ability to recognize major external changes, to quickly commit resources, and to recognize when a strategic decision was a mistake 238 PART THREE | PLANNING instance, New Balance Athletic Shoes gives customers a truly unique product: shoes in varying widths. No other athletic shoe manufacturer has shoes for narrow or wide feet and in practically any size.35 Having an effective customer communication system is an important customer service strategy. Managers should know what’s going on with customers. They need to find out what customers liked and didn’t like about their purchase encounter—from their interactions with employees to their experience with the actual product or service. It’s also important to let customers know what’s going on with the company that might affect future purchase decisions. For instance, Retailer Hot Topic is fanatical about customer feedback, which it gets in the form of shopper “report cards.” The company’s CEO, Betsy McLaughlin, pores over more than 1,000 of them each week.36 Finally, an organization’s culture is important to providing excellent customer service. This typically requires that employees be trained to provide exceptional customer service. For example, Singapore Airlines is well-known for its customer treatment. “On everything facing the customer, they do not scrimp,” says an analyst based in Singapore.37 Employees are expected to “get service right,” leaving employees with no doubt about the expectations as far as how to treat customers. INNOVATION STRATEGIES. When Procter & Gamble purchased the Iams pet-food business, it did what it always does—used its renowned research division to look for ways to transfer technology from its other divisions to make new products.38 One outcome of this cross-divisional combination: a new tartar-fighting ingredient from toothpaste that’s included in all of its dry adult pet foods. As this example shows, innovation strategies aren’t necessarily focused on just the radical, breakthrough products. They can include applying existing technology to new uses. And organizations have successfully used both approaches. What types of innovation strategies do organizations need in today’s environment? Those strategies should reflect their innovation philosophy, which is shaped by two strategic decisions: innovation emphasis and innovation timing. Managers must first decide where the emphasis of their innovation efforts will be. Is the organization going to focus on basic scientific research, product development, or process improvement? Basic scientific research requires the most resource commitment because it involves the nuts-and-bolts work of scientific research. In numerous industries (for instance, genetics engineering, pharmaceuticals, information technology, or cosmetics), an organization’s expertise in basic research is the key to a sustainable competitive advantage. However, not every organization requires this extensive commitment to scientific research to achieve high performance levels. Instead, many depend on product development strategies. Although this strategy also requires a significant resource investment, it’s not in areas associated with scientific research. Instead, the organization takes existing technology and improves on it or applies it in new ways, just as Procter & Gamble did when it applied tartar-fighting knowledge to pet food products. Both of these first two strategic approaches to innovation (basic scientific research and product development) can help an organization achieve high levels of differentiation, which can be a significant source of competitive advantage. Finally, the last strategic approach to innovation emphasis is a focus on process development. Using this strategy, an organization looks for ways to improve and enhance its work processes. The organization innovates new and improved ways for employees to do their work in all organizational areas. This innovation strategy can lead to lower costs, which, as we know, also can be a significant source of competitive advantage. Once managers have determined the focus of their innovation efforts, they must decide their innovation timing strategy. Some organizations want to be the first with innovations whereas others are content to follow or mimic the innovations. An organization that’s first to bring a product innovation to the market or to use a new process innovation is called a first mover. Being a first mover An organization that’s first to bring a product innovation to the market or to use a new process innovation CHAPTER 9 | STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT Advantages Disadvantages • Reputation for being innovative and industry leader • Cost and learning benefits • Control over scarce resources and keeping competitors from having access to them • Opportunity to begin building customer relationships and customer loyalty • Uncertainty over exact direction technology and market will go • Risk of competitors imitating innovations • Financial and strategic risks • High development costs 239 EXHIBIT 9-8 First-Mover Advantages and Disadvantages first mover has certain strategic advantages and disadvantages as shown in Exhibit 9-8. Some organizations pursue this route, hoping to develop a sustainable competitive advantage. Others have successfully developed a sustainable competitive advantage by being the followers in the industry. They let the first movers pioneer the innovations and then mimic their products or processes. Which approach managers choose depends on their organization’s innovation philosophy and specific resources and capabilities. Let’s Get Real: What Would You Do? My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma, page 224 We need to get our strategic leaders together to analyze our SWOT to see how we can leverage ourselves in this marketplace. Since we don’t have experience with iPhones, we need to gain expertise in that area—the technical area, perhaps tapping into our current global technological network. Action steps include: • Forming a focus group of our core users to see how they would use the iPhone (if at all) • Do our current customers (teens) use iPhones and how can we retain their loyalty in the future? • Examining how other companies are bringing games/applications to the iPhone • Testing games with heavy iPhone users to see what appeals to them • Are iPhone users looking for convenience and are they in the working environment? Sid Gokhale President Dowden Custom Media Montvale, NJ PREPARING FOR: Exams/Quizzes LEARNING OUTCOME 1.1 LEARNING OUTCOME 9.1 LEARNING OUTCOME 1.2 LEARNING OUTCOME 9.2 LEARNING OUTCOME 1.3 LEARNING OUTCOME 9.3 CHAPTER SUMMARY by Learning Outcomes Explain strategic management and explain why it’s important. Strategic management is what managers do to develop the organization’s strategies. Strategies are the plans for how the organization will do whatever it’s in business to do, how it will compete successfully, and how it will attract and satisfy its customers in order to achieve its goals. A business model is how a company is going to make money. Strategic management is important for three reasons. First, it makes a difference in how well organizations perform. Second, it’s important for helping managers cope with continually changing situations. Finally, strategic management helps coordinate and focus employee efforts on what’s important. Explain what managers do during the six steps of the strategic management process. The six steps in the strategic management process encompass strategy planning, implementation, and evaluation. These steps include the following: (1) identify the current mission, goals, and strategies; (2) do an external analysis; (3) do an internal analysis (steps 2 and 3 collectively are known as SWOT analysis); (4) formulate strategies; (5) implement strategies; and (6) evaluate strategies. Strengths are any activities the organization does well or unique resources that it has. Weaknesses are activities the organization doesn’t do well or resources it needs but doesn’t have. Opportunities are positive trends in the external environment. Threats are negative trends. Describe the three types of corporate strategies. A growth strategy is when an organization expands the number of markets served or products offered, either through current or new businesses. The types of growth strategies include concentration, vertical integration (backward and forward), horizontal integration, and diversification (related and unrelated). A stability strategy is when an organization makes no significant changes in what it’s doing. Both renewal strategies— retrenchment and turnaround—address organizational weaknesses that are leading to performance declines. The BCG matrix is a way to analyze a company’s portfolio of businesses by looking at a business’s market share and its industry’s anticipated growth rate. The four categories of the BCG matrix are cash cows, stars, question marks, and dogs. LEARNING OUTCOME LEARNING OUTCOME 9.4 Describe competitive advantage and the competitive strategies organizations use to get it. An organization’s competitive advantage is what sets it apart, its distinctive edge. A company’s competitive advantage becomes the basis for choosing an appropriate competitive strategy. Porter’s five forces model assesses the five competitive forces that dictate the rules of competition in an industry: threat of new entrants, threat of substitutes, bargaining power of buyers, bargaining power of suppliers, and current rivalry. Porter’s three competitive strategies are as follows: cost leadership (competing on the basis of having the lowest costs in the industry), differentiation (competing on the basis of having unique products that are widely valued by customers), and focus (competing in a narrow segment with either a cost advantage or a differentiation advantage). 240 CHAPTER 9 | STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss current strategic management issues. 9.5 Managers face three current strategic management issues: strategic leadership, strategic flexibility, and important types of strategies for today’s environment. Strategic leadership is the ability to anticipate, envision, maintain flexibility, think strategically, and work with others in the organization to initiate changes that will create a viable and valuable future for the organization and includes eight key dimensions. Strategic flexibility—that is, the ability to recognize major external environmental changes, to quickly commit resources, and to recognize when a strategic decision isn’t working— is important because managers often face highly uncertain environments. Managers can use e-business strategies to reduce costs, to differentiate their firm’s products and services, to target (focus on) specific customer groups, or to lower costs by standardizing certain office functions. Another important e-business strategy is the clicksand-bricks strategy, which combines online and traditional stand-alone locations. Strategies managers can use to become more customer oriented include giving customers what they want, communicating effectively with them, and having a culture that emphasizes customer service. Strategies managers can use to become more innovative include deciding their organization’s innovation emphasis (basic scientific research, product development, or process development) and its innovation timing (first mover or follower). 9.1 9.5 REVIEW AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. Explain why strategic management is important. 2. Describe the six steps in the strategic management process. 3. How could the Internet be helpful to managers as they follow the steps in the strategic management process? 4. How might the process of strategy formulation, implementation, and evaluation differ for (a) large businesses, (b) small businesses, (c) not-for-profit organizations, and (d) global businesses? 5. Should ethical considerations be included in analyses of an organization’s internal and external environments? Why or why not? 6. Describe the three major types of corporate strategies and how the BCG matrix is used to manage those corporate strategies. 7. Describe the role of competitive advantage and how Porter’s competitive strategies help an organization develop competitive advantage. 8. “The concept of competitive advantage is as important for not-for-profit organizations as it is for forprofit organizations.” Do you agree or disagree with this statement? Explain, using examples to make your case. 9. Explain why strategic leadership and strategic flexibility are important. 10. Describe e-business, customer service, and innovation strategies. 241 242 PART THREE | PLANNING ETHICS DILEMMA “Nearly two weeks after the largest killer whale in captivity killed one of its trainers, SeaWorld Parks and Entertainment is still wrestling with the dilemma of what to do with its most prized asset.” Orcas are big business. As the headline acts at SeaWorld parks in Orlando, San Diego, and San Antonio, they draw a combined 12.2 million visitors annually. And the animals represent a huge investment. “A killer whale can bring almost $10 million on the open market, and years of preparation are necessary for an orca to perform in a show.”39 What do you think? What ethical dilemmas are involved with this strategic decision about a valuable organizational asset? What factors would influence the decision? (Think in terms of the various stakeholders who might be affected by this decision.) SKILLS EXERCISE Describe the difficulties you may encounter in this stage as well as how much you believe activities in this stage will cost. Provide an explanation of what decisions (e.g., make or buy?) you will face and what you intend to do. 5. Describe how you’ll market your product or service. What is your selling strategy? How do you intend to reach your customers? In this section, you’ll want to describe your product or service in terms of your competitive advantage and demonstrate how you’ll exploit your competitors’ weaknesses. In addition to the market analysis, you’ll also want to provide sales forecasts in terms of the size of the market, how much of the market you can realistically capture, and how you’ll price your product or service. 6. Put together your financial statements. What’s your bottom line? Investors want to know this information. In the financial section, you’ll need to provide projected profit-and-loss statements (income statements) for approximately three to five years. You’ll also need to include a cash flow analysis as well as the company’s projected balance sheets. In the financial section, you should also give thought to how much start-up costs will be as well as to developing a financial strategy—how you intend to use funds received from a financial institution and how you’ll control and monitor the financial well-being of the company. 7. Provide an overview of the organization and its management. Identify the key executives, summarizing their education, experience, and any relevant qualifications. Identify their positions in the organization and their job roles. Explain how much salary they intend to earn initially. Identify others who may assist the organization’s management (e.g., company lawyer, accountant, board of directors). This section should also include, if relevant, a section on how you intend to deal with employees. For example, how will employees be paid, what benefits will be offered, and how will employee performance be assessed? Developing Your Business Planning Skill About the Skill An important step in starting a business or in determining a new strategic direction is preparing a business plan.40 Not only does the business plan aid in thinking about what to do and how to do it but it can be a sound basis from which to obtain funding and resources. Steps in Practicing the Skill 1. Describe your company’s background and purpose. Provide the history of the company. Briefly describe the company’s history and what this company does that’s unique. Describe what your product or service will be, how you intend to market it, and what you need to bring your product or service to the market. 2. Identify your short- and long-term goals. What is your intended goal for this organization? Clearly, for a new company three broad objectives are relevant: creation, survival, and profitability. Specific objectives can include such things as sales, market share, product quality, employee morale, and social responsibility. Identify how you plan to achieve each objective, how you intend to determine whether you met the objective, and when you intend the objective to be met (e.g., short or long term). 3. Do a thorough market analysis. You need to convince readers that you understand what you are doing, what your market is, and what competitive pressures you’ll face. In this analysis, you’ll need to describe the overall market trends, the specific market you intend to compete in, and who the competitors are. In essence, in this section you’ll perform your SWOT analysis. 4. Describe your development and production emphasis. Explain how you’re going to produce your product or service. Include time frames from start to finish. CHAPTER 9 | STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT 8. Describe the legal form of the business. Identify the legal form of the business. For example, is it a sole proprietor, a partnership, a corporation? Depending on the legal form, you may need to provide information regarding equity positions, shares of stock issued, and the like. 9. Identify the critical risks and contingencies facing the organization. In this section you’ll want to identify what you’ll do if problems arise. For instance, if you don’t meet sales forecasts, what then? Similar responses to such questions as problems with suppliers, inability to hire qualified employees, poor-quality products, and so on should be addressed. Readers want to see if you’ve anticipated potential problems and if you have contingency plans. This is the what-if section. 10. Put the business plan together. Using the information you’ve gathered from the previous nine steps, it’s now time to put the business plan together into a wellorganized document. A business plan should contain a cover page that shows the company name, address, contact person, and numbers at which the individual can be reached. The cover page should also contain the date the business was established and, if one exists, the company logo. The next page of the business plan should be a table of contents. Here you’ll want to list and identify the location of each major section and subsection in the business plan. Remember to use proper outlining techniques. Next comes the executive summary, the first section the readers will actually read. Thus, it’s one of the more critical elements of the business plan, because WORKING TOGETHER Team Exercise Organizational mission statements. Are they a promise, a commitment, or just a bunch of hot air? Form small groups of three to four individuals and find examples of three different organizational mission statements. Your first task is to evaluate the mission statements. How do they compare to if the executive summary is poorly done, readers may not read any further. In a two- to three-page summary, highlight information about the company, its management, its market and competition, the funds requested, how the funds will be used, financial history (if available), financial projections, and when investors can expect to get their money back (called the exit). Next come the main sections of your business plan; that is, the material you’ve researched and written about in steps 1 through 9. Close out the business plan with a section that summarizes the highlights of what you’ve just presented. Finally, if you have charts, exhibits, photographs, tables, and the like, you might want to include an appendix in the back of the business plan. If you do, remember to cross-reference this material to the relevant section of the report. Practicing the Skill You have a great idea for a business and need to create a business plan to present to a bank. Choose one of the following products or services and draft the part of your plan that describes how you will price and market it (see step 5). 1. 2. 3. 4. Haircuts at home (you make house calls) Olympic snowboarding computer game Online apartment rental listing Voice-activated house alarm Now choose a different product or service from the list and identify critical risks and contingencies (see step 9). the items listed in Exhibit 9-2? Would you describe each as an effective mission statement? Why or why not? How might you rewrite each mission statement to make it better? Your second task is to use the mission statements to describe the types of corporate and competitive strategies each organization might use to fulfill that mission statement. Explain your rationale for choosing each strategy. MY TURN TO BE A MANAGER Do a personal SWOT analysis. Assess your personal strengths and weaknesses (skills, talents, abilities). What are you good at? What are you not so good at? What do you enjoy doing? What don’t you enjoy doing? Then, identify career opportunities and threats by researching job prospects in the industry you’re interested in. Look at trends and projections. You might want to check out the Bureau of Labor Statistics information on job prospects. Once you have all this information, write a specific career action plan. Outline five-year career goals and what you need to do to achieve those goals. Using current business periodicals, find two examples of each of the corporate and competitive strategies. Write a description of what these businesses are doing and how it represents that particular strategy. Pick five companies from the latest version of Fortune’s “Most Admired Companies” list. Research these companies and identify their (a) mission statement, (b) strategic goals, and (c) strategies being used. Steve’s and Mary’s suggested readings: Adrian Slywotzky and Richard Wise, How to Grow When Markets 243 244 PART THREE | PLANNING Don’t (Warner Business Books, 2003); Jim Collins, Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap . . . and Others Don’t (Harper Business, 2001); Michael E. Porter, On Competition (Harvard Business School Press, 1998); James C. Collins and Jerry I. Porras, Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies (Harper Business, 1994); and Gary Hamel and C. K. Prahalad, Competing for the Future (Harvard Business School Press, 1994). Customer service, e-business, and innovation strategies are particularly important to managers today. We described in the chapter specific ways that companies can pursue these strategies. Your task is to pick customer service, e-business, or innovation and find one example for each of the specific approaches in that category. For instance, if you choose customer service, find an example of (a) giving customers what they want, (b) communicating effectively with them, and (c) providing employees with customer service training. Write a report describing your examples. In your own words, write down three things you learned in this chapter about being a good manager. Self-knowledge can be a powerful learning tool. Go to mymanagementlab.com and complete these selfassessment exercises: How Well Do I Handle Ambiguity? How Creative Am I? How Well Do I Respond to Turbulent Change? Using the results of your assessments, identify personal strengths and weaknesses. What will you do to reinforce your strengths and improve your weaknesses? CASE APPLICATION Gaga Over Gaga J ust now in her mid-twenties, Lady Gaga has taken the music world by storm with a unique blend of business savvy, interesting hair and wardrobe choices, and a fabulous sound with a “spacey Euro vibe.”41 Five years ago, Lady Gaga did not exist. But the individual who is Lady Gaga, Stefani Germanotta, was waitressing and singing in drab and dingy New York clubs. She was ambitious and had bigger goals. After being signed and dropped from one label, Def Jam (turns out that may not have been the best decision by them), she joined forces with a hand-picked core team of creative advisers she called “Haus of Gaga.” Behind all that glitz, glamour, and unusual fashion choices is a “case study of what it takes to succeed in the music business today.” Gaga’s impact on the music world in the span of a year has been nothing short of phenomenal. Writing her own material, she’s sold more than 10 million albums. Her debut album generated four No.1 songs. She also topped the digital sales chart in 2009 with 15.3 million tracks sold, most on iTunes. She’s had more than 1 billion Web views. Some 3.8 million “Little Monsters”—Gaga’s nickname for her fans—follow her on Twitter and she has over 6.4 million “fans” on Facebook. She was the most-Googled Lady Gaga and her team of creative advisors crafted a strategy consisting of a unique persona, a 360-degree deal, and the use of digital media to achieve phenomenal success in the music industry and extreme loyalty from millions of Little Monsters to her brand that spans music, video, design, and marketing. image in 2009. And then in recognition of the fact that she’s been deemed worthy of the success she’s had, she opened the Grammy’s award show in early 2010 with music legend Sir Elton John. She “reigns over a brand that spans music, video, design, and marketing.” One advertising executive said, “No other artist commands the kind of attention that Gaga does. If she does something with your brand, it’s like bam!—a million eyeballs.” For instance, together with MAC Cosmetics, she created a shade of Viva Glam lipstick that has raised $2.2 million for AIDS awareness—Viva Glam’s most successful launch ever. What strategies has she used to navigate the turbulent industry and become a star? CHAPTER 1CHAPTER | MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATIONS MANAGEMENT 9 | STRATEGIC One important component to her success is her savvy awareness of the power of digital media and her exceptional ability to exploit it. “Her persona is built for the online generation.” Even though much of Gaga’s audience has got her music online legally for free, “being embedded on the Web can pay dividends in exposure and the loyalty of fans.” Gaga keeps her Little Monsters engaged with personal musings and real-time thank-yous. Another important aspect to Gaga’s success is what’s called in the music business the 360-degree deal. The major upheaval in the music industry over the last decade led major record companies to look for ways to replace declining revenues. In a 360-degree deal, a label invests more money upfront—on marketing, for example—but in return, gets a piece of merchandise sales, touring revenue, and other earnings artists usually kept for themselves. This arrangement has been wildly successful for Gaga. Finally, Gaga’s persona has been a calculated strategy. “Gaga’s allure is that of a misfit run amok in the system, a role that has helped her cut across disparate subcultures, including teens, finicky hipsters and gays.” Her look isn’t considered shocking like it was say, for instance, when rockers Alice Cooper or Gene Simmons first appeared. It’s unique and keeps her audiences eager to see what her next image might be. Gaga is determined to not be a niche artist. However, her “now-trendy sound won’t last forever.” Her ability to remain a music industry mainstay will depend on her ability to evolve. Discussion Questions 1. How is strategic management illustrated by this case story? 2. How might SWOT analysis be helpful to Lady Gaga as she and her advisors manage her career? 3. What competitive advantage do you think Lady Gaga is pursuing? How is she exploiting that competitive advantage? 4. Do you think Lady Gaga’s success is due to external or internal factors or both? Explain. 5. What strategic implications does the suggestion that her ability to remain a music industry mainstay depends on her ability to evolve have? CASE APPLICATION Faded Signal s the world’s biggest maker of mobile phones, Nokia, the Finnish company, is a “powerhouse in Europe, A Asia, and Latin America, with market shares regularly topping 30 percent.”42 However, in the United States, Nokia phones have lost popularity over the last few years. In March 2002, Nokia led the American market with 35 percent market share. By June of 2009, its share was only 7 percent. What happened and more importantly, what is Nokia doing about it? As mobile phone usage skyrocketed, Nokia was the most popular choice. It was the “cool” phone—the one that everyone, from business executive to high school student to stay-at-home-mom wanted. In 2005, Nokia had just launched the N series, an innovative new line with a Web browser, video, music, and pictures in a single phone. That device moved Nokia a generation ahead in the race to build the first real smart phone. The “forecast for Nokia was as sunny and clear as an endless Finnish summer day.” Then came Apple and its iPhone with its clever touch screen and sophisticated software and services. With rave reviews and a reputation for being cool, customers flocked to buy one. However, Nokia executives dismissed the iPhone, saying they were “unimpressed by its engineering.” Now, three years after Apple introduced the iPhone in 2007, Nokia still has no alternative. It did not anticipate changes in American consumer tastes, like flip phones or touch screens. Another major strategic blunder 245 246 PART THREE | PLANNING was that its models were based on a European communications standard called GSM when roughly half the United States market used the CDMA (code division multiple access) format. One former Nokia executive said, “Nokia, at the height of its success, decided not to adapt its phones for the U.S. market. That was a mistake and they’re still trying to recover from this.” An executive at a North American network operator said, “The attitude at Nokia was basically: Here is a phone. Do you want it? Nokia wouldn’t play by the rules here, and they have paid a price.” That arrogant attitude and the global economic slowdown have continued to hurt the company’s sales and earnings. Meanwhile, Nokia set up liaison offices in Atlanta, Dallas, Seattle, and Parsippany, New Jersey, cities where the top American operators have big business units. And it has recently revamped its U.S. operations to collaborate more closely with those major operators. For example, AT&T has begun billing its customers who use Nokia services, keeping those customers from receiving a second bill from Nokia. Best Buy began carrying a Nokia netbook, which is a model for its new collaborative strategy. Nokia also forged a deal with Qualcomm, the largest maker of mobile phone chips for CDMA devices in the United States. It also struck a deal with Microsoft to design Windows Office Mobile software applications for phones that use Nokia’s Symbian operating system. Despite these efforts, however, some industry executives remain unimpressed. One analyst said, “They claim they get it and understand the U.S. market. But the execution still is not there.” Mark Louison, president of Nokia’s North American unit, who has a seat on Nokia’s global management board, said, “In the past, we had a one-size-fits-all mentality that worked well on a global basis but did not help us in this market. That has changed now.” The company recognized that its former strategy had not worked in North America and began trying to lay the groundwork for long-term success. Louison says, “Everything you see us doing is to build the broad set of capabilities to take us broader and deeper into the U.S. market.” Discussion Questions 1. What strategic mistakes did Nokia make in the U.S. market? 2. Why do you think a “smart” company makes “dumb” mistakes? 3. What strategies is Nokia using to revitalize its North American business? 4. How could Nokia have done better at using strategic management? What does this case story tell you about strategic management? This page intentionally left blank M anagers in baseball team front offices have discovered certain factors dictate whether they can charge more for tickets— namely, weather reports, winning streaks, and a big factor: pitching matchups.1 The San Francisco Giants are the first Major League Baseball team to try and ride these shifts in demand by repricing tickets daily, a technique known as dynamic pricing. How well does it work? In 2009, the Giants were able to earn an extra $500,000 in revenue from dynamic pricing. In 2010, revenues increased about 6 percent. As this example shows, managers use planning tools and techniques to help their organizations be more efficient and effective. In this module, we discuss three categories of basic planning tools and techniques: techniques for assessing the environment, techniques for allocating resources, and contemporary planning techniques. Techniques for Assessing the Environment Leigh Knopf, former senior manager for strategic planning at the AICPA, says that many larger accounting firms have set up external analysis departments to “study the wider environment in which they, and their clients, operate.” These organizations have recognized that, “What happens in India in today’s environment may have an impact on an American accounting firm in North Dakota.”2 In our description of the strategic management process in Chapter 9, we discussed the importance of assessing the organization’s environment. Three techniques help managers do that: environmental scanning, forecasting, and benchmarking. Environmental Scanning How important is environmental scanning? While looking around on competitor Google’s company Web site, Bill Gates found a help-wanted page with descriptions of all the open jobs. What piqued his interest, however, was that many of these posted job qualifications were identical to Microsoft’s job requirements. He began to wonder why Google—a Web search company—would be posting job openings for 248 software engineers with backgrounds that “had nothing to do with web searches and everything to do with Microsoft’s core business of operating-system design, compiler optimization, and distributed-systems architecture.” Gates e-mailed an urgent message to some of his top executives saying that Microsoft had better be on its toes because it sure looked like Google was preparing to move into being more of a software company.3 How can managers become aware of significant environmental changes such as a new law in Germany permitting shopping for “tourist items” on Sunday; the increased trend of counterfeit consumer products in South Africa; the precipitous decline in the working-age populations in Japan, Germany, Italy, and Russia; or the decrease in family size in Mexico? Managers in both small and large organizations use environmental scanning, which is the screening of large amounts of information to anticipate and interpret changes in the environment. Extensive environmental scanning is likely to reveal issues and concerns that could affect an organization’s current or planned activities. Research has shown that companies that use environmental scanning have higher | PLANNING TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES MODULE performance.4 Organizations that don’t keep on top of environmental changes are likely to experience the opposite! COMPETITOR INTELLIGENCE. A fast-growing area of envi- ronmental scanning is competitor intelligence.5 It’s a process by which organizations gather information about their competitors and get answers to questions such as Who are they? What are they doing? How will what they’re doing affect us? Let’s look at an example of how one organization used competitor intelligence in its planning. Dun & Bradstreet (D&B), a leading provider of business information, has an active business intelligence division. The division manager received a call from an assistant vice president for sales in one of the company’s geographic territories. This person had been on a sales call with a major customer and the customer happened to mention in passing that another company had visited and made a major presentation about its services. What was interesting was that, although D&B had plenty of competitors, this particular company wasn’t one of them. The manager gathered together a team that sifted through dozens of sources (research services, Internet, personal contacts, and other external sources) and quickly became convinced that there was something to this; that this company was “aiming its guns right at us.” Managers at D&B jumped into action to develop plans to counteract this competitive attack.6 Competitor intelligence experts suggest that 80 percent of what managers need to know about competitors can be found out from their own employees, suppliers, and customers.7 Competitor intelligence doesn’t have to involve spying. Advertisements, promotional materials, press releases, reports filed with government agencies, annual reports, want ads, newspaper reports, and industry studies are examples of readily accessible sources of information. Attending trade shows and debriefing the company’s salesforce can be other good sources of competitor information. Many firms regularly buy competitors’ products and have their own engineers study them (through a process called reverse engineering) to learn about new technical innovations. In addition, the Internet has opened up vast sources of competitor intelligence as many corporate Web pages include new product information and other press releases. Managers need to be careful about the way competitor information is gathered to prevent any concerns about whether it’s legal or ethical. For instance, at Procter & Gamble, executives hired competitive intelligence firms to spy on its competitors in the hair-care business. At least one of these firms misrepresented themselves to competitor Unilever’s employees, trespassed at Unilever’s hair-care headquarters in Chicago, and went through trash dumpsters to gain information. When P&G’s CEO found out, he immediately fired the individuals responsible and apologized to Unilever.8 Competitor intelligence becomes illegal corporate spying when it involves the theft of proprietary materials or trade secrets by any means. The Economic Espionage Act makes it a crime in the United States to engage in economic espionage or to steal a trade secret.9 The difficult decisions about competitive intelligence arise because often there’s a fine line between what’s considered legal and ethical and what’s considered legal but unethical. Although the top manager at one competitive intelligence firm contends that 99.9 percent of intelligence gathering is legal, there’s no question that some people or companies will go to any lengths—some unethical—to get information about competitors.10 GLOBAL SCANNING. One type of environmental scanning that’s particularly important is global scanning. Because world markets are complex and dynamic, managers have expanded the scope of their scanning efforts to gain vital information on global forces that might affect their organizations.11 The value of global scanning to managers, of course, largely depends on the extent of the organization’s global activities. For a company that has significant global interests, global scanning can be quite valuable. For instance, Sealed Air Corporation of Elmwood Park, New Jersey—you’ve probably seen and used its most popular product, Bubble Wrap—tracks global demographic changes. Company managers found that as countries move from agriculture-based societies to industrial ones, the population tends to eat out more and favor prepackaged foods, which translates to more sales of its food packaging products.12 Because the sources that managers use for scanning the domestic environment are too limited for global scanning, managers must globalize their perspectives. For instance, they can subscribe to information clipping services that review world newspapers and business periodicals and provide summaries of desired information. Also, there are numerous electronic services that provide topic searches and automatic updates in global areas of special interest to managers. Forecasting The second technique managers can use to assess the environment is forecasting. Forecasting is an important part of planning and managers need forecasts that will allow them to predict future events effectively and in a timely manner. Environmental scanning establishes the basis for forecasts, which are predictions of outcomes. Virtually any component in an organization’s environment can be forecasted. Let’s look at how managers forecast and the effectiveness of those forecasts. environmental scanning competitor intelligence forecasts The screening of large amounts of information to anticipate and interpret changes in the environment Environmental scanning activity by which organizations gather information about competitors Predictions of outcome 249 250 PART THREE | PLANNING FORECASTING TECHNIQUES. Forecasting techniques fall into two categories: quantitative and qualitative. Quantitative forecasting applies a set of mathematical rules to a series of past data to predict outcomes. These techniques are preferred when managers have sufficient hard data that can be used. Qualitative forecasting, in contrast, uses the judgment and opinions of knowledgeable individuals to predict outcomes. Qualitative techniques typically are used when precise data are limited or hard to obtain. Exhibit PM-1 describes some popular forecasting techniques. Today, many organizations collaborate on forecasts using an approach known as CPFR, which stands for collaborative planning, forecasting, and replenishment.13 CPFR provides a framework for the flow of information, goods, and services between retailers and manufacturers. Each organization relies on its own data to calculate a demand forecast for a particular product. If their respective forecasts differ by a certain amount (say 10%), the retailer and manufacturer exchange data and written comments until they arrive at a more accurate forecast. Such collaborative forecasting helps both organizations do a better job of planning. FORECASTING EFFECTIVENESS. The goal of forecasting is to provide managers with information that will facilitate EXHIBIT PM-1 Technique Forecasting Techniques Quantitative decision making. Despite its importance to planning, managers have had mixed success with it.14 For instance, prior to a holiday weekend at the Procter & Gamble factory in Lima, Ohio, managers were preparing to shut down the facility early so as not to have to pay employees for just sitting around and to give them some extra time off. The move seemed to make sense since an analysis of purchase orders and historical sales trends indicated that the factory had already produced enough cases of Liquid Tide detergent to meet laundry demand over the holiday. However, managers got a real surprise. One of the company’s largest retail customers placed a sizable—and unforeseen—order. They had to reopen the plant, pay the workers overtime, and schedule emergency shipments to meet the retailer’s request.15 As this example shows, managers’ forecasts aren’t always accurate. In a survey of financial managers in the United States, United Kingdom, France, and Germany, 84 percent of the respondents said their financial forecasts were inaccurate by 5 percent or more; 54 percent of the respondents reported inaccuracy of 10 percent or more.16 Results of another survey showed that 39 percent of financial executives said they could reliably forecast revenues only one quarter out. Even more disturbing is that 16 percent of those executives said they were “in the dark” about revenue forecasts.17 But it is Description Application Time series analysis Fits a trend line to a mathematical equation and projects into the future by means of this equation Predicting next quarter’s sales on the basis of 4 years of previous sales data Regression models Predicts one variable on the basis of known or assumed other variables Seeking factors that will predict a certain level of sales (e.g., price, advertising expenditures) Econometric models Uses a set of regression equations to simulate segments of the economy Predicting change in car sales as a result of changes in tax laws Economic indicators Uses one or more economic indicators to predict a future state of the economy Using change in GNP to predict discretionary income Substitution effect Uses a mathematical formula to predict how, when, and under what circumstances a new product or technology will replace an existing one Predicting the effect of DVD players on the sale of VHS players Jury of opinion Combines and averages the opinions of experts Polling the company’s human resource managers to predict next year’s college recruitment needs Salesforce composition Combines estimates from field sales personnel of customers’ expected purchases Predicting next year’s sales of industrial lasers Qualitative Customer evaluation Combines estimates from established customers’ purchases Surveying major car dealers by a car manufacturer to determine types and quantities of products desired | PLANNING TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES MODULE important to try to make forecasting as effective as possible, because research shows that a company’s forecasting ability can be a distinctive competence.18 Here are some suggestions for making forecasting more effective.19 First, it’s important to understand that forecasting techniques are most accurate when the environment is not rapidly changing. The more dynamic the environment, the more likely managers are to forecast ineffectively. Also, forecasting is relatively ineffective in predicting nonseasonal events such as recessions, unusual occurrences, discontinued operations, and the actions or reactions of competitors. Next, use simple forecasting methods. They tend to do as well as, and often better than, complex methods that may mistakenly confuse random data for meaningful information. For instance, at St. Louis–based Emerson Electric, chairman emeritus Chuck Knight found that forecasts developed as part of the company’s planning process indicated that the competition wasn’t just domestic anymore, but global. He didn’t use any complex mathematical techniques to come to this conclusion but instead relied on the information already collected as part of his company’s planning process. Next, look at involving more people in the process. At Fortune 100 companies, it’s not unusual to have 1,000 to 5,000 managers providing forecasting input. These businesses are finding that as more people are involved in the process, the more the reliability of the outcomes improves.20 Next, compare every forecast with “no change.” A no change forecast is accurate approximately half the time. Next, use rolling forecasts that look 12 to 18 months ahead, instead of using a single, static forecast. These types of forecasts can help managers spot trends better and help their organizations be more adaptive in changing environments.21 It’s also important to not rely on a single forecasting method. Make forecasts with several models and average them, especially when making longerrange forecasts. Next, don’t assume that you can accurately identify turning points in a trend. What is typically perceived as a significant turning point often turns out to be simply a random event. And, finally, remember that forecasting is a managerial skill and as such can be practiced and improved. Forecasting software has made the task somewhat less mathematically challenging, although the “number crunching” is only a small part of the activity. Interpreting the forecast and incorporating that information into planning decisions is the challenge facing managers. Benchmarking Suppose that you’re a talented pianist or gymnast. To make yourself better, you want to learn from the best so you watch outstanding musicians or athletes for motions and techniques they use as they perform. That same approach is involved in the final technique for assessing the environment we’re going to discuss—benchmarking, the search for the best practices among competitors or noncompetitors that lead to their superior performance.22 Does benchmarking work? Studies show that users have achieved 69 percent faster growth and 45 percent greater productivity.23 The basic idea behind benchmarking is that managers can improve performance by analyzing and then copying the methods of the leaders in various fields. Organizations such as Nissan, Payless Shoe Source, the U.S. military, General Mills, United Airlines, and Volvo Construction Equipment have used benchmarking as a tool in improving performance. In fact, some companies have chosen some pretty unusual benchmarking partners! IBM studied Las Vegas casinos for ways to discourage employee theft. Many hospitals have benchmarked their admissions processes against Marriott Hotels. And Giordano Holdings Ltd., a Hong Kong–based manufacturer and retailer of mass-market casual wear, borrowed its “good quality, good value” concept from Marks & Spencer, used Limited Brands to benchmark its point-of-sales computerized information system, and modeled its simplified product offerings on McDonald’s menu.24 What does benchmarking involve? Exhibit PM-2 illustrates the four steps typically used in benchmarking. Techniques for Allocating Resources Once an organization’s goals have been established, it’s important to determine how those goals are going to be accomplished. Before managers can organize and lead as goals are implemented, they must have resources, which are the assets of the organization (financial, physical, human, and intangible). How can managers allocate these resources effectively and efficiently so that organizational goals are met? Although managers can choose from a number of techniques for allocating resources (many of which are covered in courses on accounting, finance, and operations management), we’ll discuss four techniques here: budgeting, scheduling, breakeven analysis, and linear programming. quantitative forecasting benchmarking Forecasting that applies a set of mathematical rules to a series of past data to predict outcome The search for the best practices among competitors or noncompetitors that lead to their superior performance qualitative forecasting Forecasting that uses the judgment and opinions of knowledgeable individuals to predict outcomes resources The assets of the organization including financial, physical, human, intangible, and structural/cultural 251 252 PART THREE | PLANNING EXHIBIT PM-2 Steps in Benchmarking 1 Form a benchmarking planning team. 4 BEST PRACTICES Prepare and implement action plan. Identify: • What is to be benchmarked • Comparative organizations • Data collection methods Gather internal and external data. 2 Analyze data to identify performance gaps. 3 Source: Based on Y. K. Shetty, “Aiming High: Competitive Benchmarking for Superior Performance,” Long Range Planning, February 1993, p. 42. Budgeting Most of us have had some experience, as limited as it might be, with budgets. We probably learned at an early age that unless we allocated our “revenues” carefully, our weekly allowance was spent on “expenses” before the week was half over. A budget is a numerical plan for allocating resources to specific activities. Managers typically prepare budgets for revenues, expenses, and large capital expenditures such as equipment. It’s not unusual, though, for budgets to be used for improving time, space, and use of material resources. These types of budgets substitute nondollar numbers for dollar amounts. Such items as person-hours, capacity utilization, or units of production can be budgeted for daily, weekly, or monthly activities. Exhibit PM-3 describes the different types of budgets that managers might use. Why are budgets so popular? Probably because they’re applicable to a wide variety of organizations and work activities within organizations. We live in a world in which almost everything is expressed in monetary units. Dollars, rupees, pesos, euros, yuan, yen, and the like are used as a common measuring unit within a country. That’s why monetary budgets are a useful tool for allocating resources and guiding work in such diverse departments as manufacturing and information systems or at various levels in an organization. Budgets are one planning technique that most managers, regardless of organizational level, use. It’s an important managerial activity because it forces financial discipline and structure EXHIBIT PM-3 Types of Budgets Cash Budget Forecasts cash on hand and how much will be needed Variable Budget Takes into account the costs that vary with volume Profit Budget Combines revenue and expense budgets of various units to determine each unit’s profit contribution Revenue Budget Projects future sales OR Fixed Budget Assumes fixed level of sales or production Expense Budget Lists primary activities and allocates dollar amount to each Source: Based on R. S. Russell and B. W. Taylor III, Production and Operations Management (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1995), p. 287. | PLANNING TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES MODULE • • • • • • • Collaborate and communicate. Be flexible. Goals should drive budgets—budgets should not determine goals. Coordinate budgeting throughout the organization. Use budgeting/planning software when appropriate. Remember that budgets are tools. Remember that profits result from smart management, not because you budgeted for them. throughout the organization. However, many managers don’t like preparing budgets because they feel the process is time consuming, inflexible, inefficient, and ineffective.25 How can the budgeting process be improved? Exhibit PM-4 provides some suggestions. Organizations such as Texas Instruments, IKEA, Hendrick Motorsports, Volvo, and Svenska Handelsbanken have incorporated several of these suggestions as they revamped their budgeting processes. Scheduling Jackie is a manager at a Chico’s store in San Francisco. Every week, she determines employees’ work hours and the store area where each employee will be working. If you observed any group of supervisors or department managers for a few days, you would see them doing much the same—allocating resources by detailing what activities have to be done, the order in which they are to be completed, who is to do each, and when they are to be completed. These managers are scheduling. In this section, we’ll review some useful scheduling devices including Gantt charts, load charts, and PERT network analysis. GANTT CHARTS. The Gantt chart was developed during the early 1900s by Henry Gantt, an associate of Frederick EXHIBIT PM-4 How to Improve Budgeting Taylor, the scientific management expert. The idea behind a Gantt chart is simple. It’s essentially a bar graph with time on the horizontal axis and the activities to be scheduled on the vertical axis. The bars show output, both planned and actual, over a period of time. The Gantt chart visually shows when tasks are supposed to be done and compares those projections with the actual progress on each task. It’s a simple but important device that lets managers detail easily what has yet to be done to complete a job or project and to assess whether an activity is ahead of, behind, or on schedule. Exhibit PM-5 depicts a simplified Gantt chart for book production developed by a manager in a publishing company. Time is expressed in months across the top of the chart. The major work activities are listed down the left side. Planning involves deciding what activities need to be done to get the book finished, the order in which those activities need to be completed, and the time that should be allocated to each activity. Where a box sits within a time frame reflects its planned sequence. The shading represents actual progress. The chart also serves as a control tool because the manager can see deviations from the plan. In this example, both the design of the cover and the review of first pages are running behind schedule. Cover design is EXHIBIT PM-5 Activity Month 1 2 3 4 A Gantt Chart Copyedit manuscript Design sample pages Draw artwork Review first pages Print final pages Design cover Actual progress Goals Reporting Date budget scheduling Gantt chart A numerical plan for allocating resources to specific activities Detailing what activities have to be done, the order in which they are to be completed, who is to do each, and when they are to be completed A scheduling chart developed by Henry Gantt that shows actual and planned output over a period of time 253 254 PART THREE | PLANNING even thousands of activities, some of which must be done simultaneously and some of which can’t begin until preceding activities have been completed. If you’re constructing a building, you obviously can’t start putting up the walls until the foundation is laid. How can managers schedule such a complex project? The program evaluation and review technique (PERT) is highly appropriate for such projects. A PERT network is a flowchart diagram that depicts the sequence of activities needed to complete a project and the time or costs associated with each activity. With a PERT network, a manager must think through what has to be done, determine which events depend on one another, and identify potential trouble spots. PERT also makes it easy to compare the effects alternative actions might have on scheduling and costs. Thus, PERT allows managers to monitor a project’s progress, identify possible bottlenecks, and shift resources as necessary to keep the project on schedule. To understand how to construct a PERT network, you need to know four terms. Events are end points that represent the completion of major activities. Activities represent the time or resources required to progress from one event to another. Slack time is the amount of time an individual activity can be delayed without delaying the whole project. The critical path is the longest or most time-consuming sequence of events and activities in a PERT network. Any delay in completing events on this path would delay completion of the entire project. In other words, activities on the critical path have zero slack time. Developing a PERT network requires that a manager identify all key activities needed to complete a project, rank them in order of occurrence, and estimate each activity’s completion time. Exhibit PM-7 explains the steps in this process. Most PERT projects are complicated and include numerous activities. Such complicated computations can be done with specialized PERT software. However, let’s work through a simple example. Assume that you’re the superintendent at a construction company and have been assigned to oversee the construction of an office building. Because time really is money in your business, you must determine how long it will take to get the building completed. You’ve determined the about three weeks behind (note that there has been no actual progress—shown by blue color line—as of the reporting date), and first pages review is about two weeks behind schedule (note that as of the report date, actual progress— shown by blue color line—is about six weeks, out of a goal of completing in two months). Given this information, the manager might need to take some action to either make up for the two lost weeks or to ensure that no further delays will occur. At this point, the manager can expect that the book will be published at least two weeks later than planned if no action is taken. LOAD CHARTS. A load chart is a modified Gantt chart. Instead of listing activities on the vertical axis, load charts list either entire departments or specific resources. This arrangement allows managers to plan and control capacity utilization. In other words, load charts schedule capacity by work areas. For example, Exhibit PM-6 shows a load chart for six production editors at the same publishing company. Each editor supervises the production and design of several books. By reviewing a load chart, the executive editor, who supervises the six production editors, can see who is free to take on a new book. If everyone is fully scheduled, the executive editor might decide not to accept any new projects, to accept new projects and delay others, to make the editors work overtime, or to employ more production editors. As this exhibit shows, only Antonio and Maurice are completely scheduled for the next six months. The other editors have some unassigned time and might be able to accept new projects or be available to help other editors who get behind. PERT NETWORK ANALYSIS. Gantt and load charts are use- ful as long as the activities being scheduled are few in number and independent of each other. But what if a manager had to plan a large project such as a departmental reorganization, the implementation of a cost-reduction program, or the development of a new product that required coordinating inputs from marketing, manufacturing, and product design? Such projects require coordinating hundreds and EXHIBIT PM-6 A Load Chart Editors Month 1 Annie Antonio Kim Maurice Dave Penny Work scheduled 2 3 4 5 6 | PLANNING TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES MODULE 1. Identify every significant activity that must be achieved for a project to be completed. The accomplishment of each activity results in a set of events or outcomes. 2. Determine the order in which these events must be completed. 3. Diagram the flow of activities from start to finish, identifying each activity and its relationship to all other activities. Use circles to indicate events and arrows to represent activities. This results in a flowchart diagram called a PERT network. 4. Compute a time estimate for completing each activity. This is done with a weighted average that uses an optimistic time estimate (to) of how long the activity would take under ideal conditions, a most likely estimate (tm) of the time the activity normally should take, and a pessimistic estimate (tp) that represents the time that an activity should take under the worst possible conditions. The formula for calculating the expected time (te) is then te = EXHIBIT PM-7 Steps in Developing a PERT Network to + 4tm + tp 6 5. Using the network diagram that contains time estimates for each activity, determine a schedule for the start and finish dates of each activity and for the entire project. Any delays that occur along the critical path require the most attention because they can delay the whole project. specific activities and events. Exhibit PM-8 outlines the major events in the construction project and your estimate of the expected time to complete each. Exhibit PM-9 shows the actual PERT network based on the data in Exhibit PM-8. You’ve also calculated the length of time that each path of activities will take: A-B-C-D-I-J-K (44 weeks) A-B-C-D-G-H-J-K (50 weeks) A-B-C-E-G-H-J-K (47 weeks) A-B-C-F-G-H-J-K (47 weeks) Event A B C D E F G H I J K Description Your PERT network shows that if everything goes as planned, the total project completion time will be 50 weeks. This is calculated by tracing the project’s critical path (the longest sequence of activities): A-B-C-D-G-H-J-K and adding up the times. You know that any delay in completing the events on this path would delay the completion of the entire project. Taking six weeks instead of four to put in the floor covering and paneling (Event I) would have no effect on the final completion date. Why? Because that event isn’t on the critical path. However, taking seven weeks instead of Expected Time (in weeks) Preceding Event 10 6 14 6 3 3 5 5 4 3 1 None A B C C C D, E, F G D I, H J Approve design and get permits Dig subterranean garage Erect frame and siding Construct floor Install windows Put on roof Install internal wiring Install elevator Put in floor covering and paneling Put in doors and interior decorative trim Turn over to building management group EXHIBIT PM-8 Events and Activities in Constructing an Office Building load chart events slack time A modified Gantt chart that schedules capacity by entire departments or specific resources End points that represent the completion of major activities in a PERT network PERT network activities The amount of time an individual activity can be delayed without delaying the whole project A flowchart diagram showing the sequence of activities needed to complete a project and the time or cost associated with each The time or resources needed to progress from one event to another in a PERT network critical path The longest sequence of activities in a PERT network 255 256 PART THREE | PLANNING EXHIBIT PM-9 PERT Network for Constructing an Office Building Start 10 6 A B 14 3 C 3 six to dig the subterranean garage (Event B) would likely delay the total project. A manager who needed to get back on schedule or to cut the 50-week completion time would want to concentrate on those activities along the critical path that could be completed faster. How might the manager do this? He or she could look to see if any of the other activities not on the critical path had slack time in which resources could be transferred to activities that were on the critical path. Breakeven Analysis Managers at Glory Foods want to know how many units of their new sensibly seasoned canned vegetables must be sold in order to break even—that is, the point at which total revenue is just sufficient to cover total costs. Breakeven analysis is a widely used resource allocation technique to help managers determine breakeven point.26 Breakeven analysis is a simple calculation, yet it’s valuable to managers because it points out the relationship between revenues, costs, and profits. To compute breakeven point (BE), a manager needs to know the unit price of the product being sold (P), the variable cost per unit (VC), and total fixed costs (TFC). An organization breaks even when its total revenue is just enough to equal its total costs. But total cost has two parts: fixed and variable. Fixed costs are expenses that do not change regardless of volume. Examples include insurance premiums, rent, and property taxes. 4 D 6 E F I 5 5 G 3 J 5 H 5 Variable costs change in proportion to output and include raw materials, labor costs, and energy costs. Breakeven point can be computed graphically or by using the following formula: BE = TFC P - VC This formula tells us that (1) total revenue will equal total cost when we sell enough units at a price that covers all variable unit costs, and (2) the difference between price and variable costs, when multiplied by the number of units sold, equals the fixed costs. Let’s work through an example. Assume that Randy’s Photocopying Service charges $0.10 per photocopy. If fixed costs are $27,000 a year and variable costs are $0.04 per copy, Randy can compute his breakeven point as follows: $27,000 ÷ ($0.10 – $0.04) = 450,000 copies, or when annual revenues are $45,000 (450,000 copies * $0.10). This same relationship is shown graphically in Exhibit PM-10. As a planning tool, breakeven analysis could help Randy set his sales goal. For example, he could determine his profit goal and then calculate what sales level is needed to reach that goal. Breakeven analysis could also tell Randy how much volume has to increase to break even if he’s currently operating at a loss or how much volume he can afford to lose and still break even. Breakeven Analysis Total Revenue 70,000 Profit Area Revenue/Cost ($) 60,000 Loss Area Variable Costs 40,000 30,000 K 3 EXHIBIT PM-10 50,000 1 Breakeven Point Total Costs 20,000 Fixed Costs 10,000 100 200 300 400 500 600 Output (in thousands) | PLANNING TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES MODULE Linear Programming Maria Sanchez manages a manufacturing plant that produces two kinds of cinnamon-scented home fragrance products: wax candles and a woodchip potpourri sold in bags. Business is good, and she can sell all of the products she can produce. Her dilemma: Given that the bags of potpourri and the wax candles are manufactured in the same facility, how many of each product should she produce to maximize profits? Maria can use linear programming to solve her resource allocation problem. Although linear programming can be used here, it can’t be applied to all resource allocation problems because it requires that resources be limited, that the goal be outcome optimization, that resources can be combined in alternative ways to produce a number of output mixes, and that a linear relationship exist between variables (a change in one variable must be accompanied by an exactly proportional change in the other).27 For Maria’s business, that last condition would be met if it took exactly twice the amount of raw materials and hours of labor to produce two of a given home fragrance product as it took to produce one. What kinds of problems can be solved with linear programming? Some applications include selecting transportation routes that minimize shipping costs, allocating a limited advertising budget among various product brands, making the optimal assignment of people among projects, and determining how much of each product to make with a limited number of resources. Let’s return to Maria’s problem and see how linear programming could help her solve it. Fortunately, her problem is relatively simple, so we can solve it rather quickly. For complex linear programming problems, managers can use computer software programs designed specifically to help develop optimizing solutions. First, we need to establish some facts about Maria’s business. She has computed the profit margins on her home fragrance products at $10 for a bag of potpourri and $18 for a scented candle. These numbers establish the basis for Maria to be able to express her objective function as maximum profit = $10P + $18S, where P is the number of bags of potpourri produced and S is the number of scented candles produced. The objective function is simply a mathematical equation that can predict the outcome of all proposed alternatives. In addition, Maria knows how much time each fragrance product must spend in production and the monthly production capacity (1,200 hours in manufacturing and 900 hours in assembly) for manufacturing and assembly. (See Exhibit PM-11.) The production capacity numbers act as constraints on her overall capacity. Now Maria can establish her constraint equations: 2P + 4S … 1,200 2P + 2S … 900 Of course, Maria can also state that P Ú 0 and S Ú 0 because neither fragrance product can be produced in a volume less than zero. Maria has graphed her solution in Exhibit PM-12. The shaded area represents the options that don’t exceed the capacity of either department. What does this mean? Well, let’s look first at the manufacturing constraint line BE. We know that total manufacturing capacity is 1,200 hours, so if Maria decides to produce all potpourri bags, the maximum she can produce is 600 (1,200 hours ÷ 2 hours required to produce a bag of potpourri). If she decides to produce all scented candles, the maximum she can produce is 300 (1,200 hours ÷ 4 hours required to produce a scented candle). The other constraint Maria faces is that of assembly, shown by line DF. If Maria decides to produce all potpourri bags, the maximum she can assemble is 450 (900 hours production capacity ÷ 2 hours required to assemble). Likewise, if Maria decides to produce all scented candles, the maximum she can assemble is also 450 because the scented candles also take 2 hours to assemble. The constraints imposed by these capacity limits establish Maria’s feasibility region. Her optimal resource allocation will be defined at one of the corners within this feasibility region. Point C provides the maximum profits within the constraints stated. How do we know? At point A, profits would be 0 (no production of either potpourri bags or scented candles). At point B, profits would be $5,400 (300 scented candles Number of Hours Required (per unit) Department Potpourri Bags Scented Candles Manufacturing Assembly Profit per unit 2 2 $10 4 2 $18 Monthly Production Capacity (in hours) 1,200 900 breakeven analysis linear programming A technique for identifying the point at which total revenue is just sufficient to cover total costs A mathematical technique that solves resource allocation problems EXHIBIT PM-11 Production Data for Cinnamon-Scented Products 257 258 PART THREE | PLANNING Graphical Solution to Linear Programming Problem Quantity of Scented Candles EXHIBIT PM-12 700 600 500 F 400 300 B 200 Feasibility Region 100 A * $18 profit and 0 potpourri bags produced = $5,400). At point D, profits would be $4,500 (450 potpourri bags produced * $10 profit and 0 scented candles produced C D E 100 200 300 400 500 600 Quantity of Potpourri Bags = $4,500). At point C, however, profits would be $5,700 (150 scented candles produced * $18 profit and 300 potpourri bags produced * $10 profit = $5,700). Contemporary Planning Techniques Lowest home mortgage rates since 1950s. H1N1 flu pandemic. Chemical/biological attacks. Recession/inflation worries. Category 4 or 5 hurricanes. Changing competition. Today’s managers face the challenges of planning in an environment that’s both dynamic and complex. Two planning techniques that are appropriate for this type of environment are project management and scenarios. Both techniques emphasize flexibility, something that’s important to making planning more effective and efficient in this type of organizational environment. Project Management Different types of organizations, from manufacturers such as Coleman and Boeing to software design firms such as SAS and Microsoft, use projects. A project is a one-timeonly set of activities that has a definite beginning and ending point in time.28 Projects vary in size and scope—from Boston’s “big dig” downtown traffic tunnel to a sorority’s holiday formal. Project management is the task of getting a project’s activities done on time, within budget, and according to specifications.29 More and more organizations are using project management because the approach fits well with the need for flexibility and rapid response to perceived market opportunities. When organizations undertake projects that are unique, have specific deadlines, contain complex interrelated tasks requiring specialized skills, and are temporary in nature, these projects often do not fit into the standardized planning procedures that guide an organization’s other routine work activities. Instead, managers use project management techniques to effectively and efficiently accomplish the project’s goals. What does the project management process involve? PROJECT MANAGEMENT PROCESS. In the typical project, work is done by a project team whose members are assigned from their respective work areas to the project and who report to a project manager. The project manager coordinates the project’s activities with other departments. When the project team accomplishes its goals, it disbands and members move on to other projects or back to their permanent work area. The essential features of the project planning process are shown in Exhibit PM-13. The process begins by clearly defining the project’s goals. This step is necessary because the manager and the team members need to know what’s expected. All activities in the project and the resources needed to do them must then be identified. What materials and labor are needed to complete the project? This step may be time-consuming and complex, particularly if the project is unique and the managers have no history or experience with similar projects. Once the activities have been identified, the sequence of completion needs to be determined. What activities must be completed before others can begin? Which can be done simultaneously? This step often uses flowchart diagrams such as a Gantt chart, a load chart, or a PERT network. Next, the project activities need to be scheduled. Time estimates for each activity are done, and these estimates are used to develop an overall project schedule and completion date. Then the project schedule | PLANNING TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES MODULE EXHIBIT PM-13 Project Planning Process Define objectives. Identify activities and resources. Establish sequences. Estimate time for activities. Determine project completion date. Compare with objectives. Determine additional resource requirements. Source: Based on R. S. Russell and B. W. Taylor III, Production and Operations Management (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1995), p. 287. is compared to the goals, and any necessary adjustments are made. If the project completion time is too long, the manager might assign more resources to critical activities so they can be completed faster. Today, the project management process can take place online as a number of Web-based software packages are available. These packages cover aspects from project accounting and estimating to project scheduling and bug and defect tracking.30 THE ROLE OF THE PROJECT MANAGER. The temporary nature of projects makes managing them different from, say, overseeing a production line or preparing a weekly tally of costs on an ongoing basis. The one-shot nature of the work makes project managers the organizational equivalent of a hired gunman. There’s a job to be done. It has to be defined—in detail. And the project manager is responsible for how it’s done. At J.B. Hunt Transport Services, the head of project management trains project managers on both technical and interpersonal skills so that they know how to “. . . run a project effectively.”31 Even with the availability of sophisticated computerized and online scheduling programs and other project management tools, the role of project manager remains difficult because he or she is managing people who typically are still assigned to their permanent work areas. The only real influence project managers have is their communication skills and their power of persuasion. To make matters worse, team members seldom work on just one project. They’re usually assigned to two or three at any given time. So project managers end up competing with each other to focus a worker’s attention on his or her particular project. Scenario Planning During the 1990s, business was so good at Colgate-Palmolive that then-chairman Reuben Mark worried about what “might go wrong.” He installed an “early-warning system to flag problems before they blew up into company-wrecking crises.” For instance, a red-flag report alerted Mark “that officials in Baddi, India, had questions about how a plant treated wastewater.” Mark’s response was to quickly assign an engineering team to check it out and prevent potential problems.32 We already know how important it is that today’s managers do what Reuben Mark was doing—monitor and assess the external environment for trends and changes. As they assess the environment, issues and concerns that could affect their organization’s current or planned operations are likely to be revealed. All of these issues won’t be equally important, so it’s usually necessary to focus on a limited set that are most important and to develop scenarios based on each. A scenario is a consistent view of what the future is likely to be. Developing scenarios also can be described as contingency planning; that is, if this event happens, then we need to take these actions. If, for instance, environmental scanning reveals increasing interest by the U.S. Congress for raising the national minimum wage, managers at Subway could create multiple scenarios to assess the possible consequences of such an action. What would be the implications for its labor costs if the minimum wage was raised to $10 an hour? How about $12 an hour? What effect would these changes have on the chain’s bottom line? How might competitors respond? Different assumptions lead to different outcomes. The intent of scenario planning is not to try to predict the future but to reduce uncertainty by playing out potential situations under different specified conditions.33 Subway could, for example, develop a set of scenarios ranging from optimistic to pessimistic in terms of the minimum wage issue. It would then be prepared to implement new strategies to get and keep a competitive advantage. An expert in scenario planning said, “Just the process of doing scenarios causes executives to rethink and clarify the essence of the business environment in ways they almost certainly have never done before.”34 project project management scenario A one-time-only set of activities that has a definite beginning and ending point in time The task of getting a project’s activities done on time, within budget, and according to specifications A consistent view of what the future is likely to be 259 260 PART THREE | PLANNING Although scenario planning is useful in anticipating events that can be anticipated, it’s difficult to forecast random events—the major surprises and aberrations that can’t be foreseen. For instance, an outbreak of deadly and devastating tornadoes in southwest Missouri on January 7, 2008, was a scenario that could be anticipated. The disaster recovery planning that took place after the storms was effective because this type of scenario had been experienced before. A response had already been planned and people knew what to do. But the planning challenge comes from those totally random and unexpected events. For instance, the 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, D.C., were random, unexpected, and a total shock to many organizations. Scenario planning was of little use because no one could have envisioned this scenario. As difficult as it may be for managers to anticipate and deal with these random events, they’re not totally vulnerable to the consequences. One suggestion that has been identified by risk experts as particularly important is to have an early warning system in place. (A similar idea is the tsunami warning systems in the Pacific and in Alaska, which alert officials to potentially dangerous tsunamis and give them time to take action.) Early warning indicators for organizations can give managers advance notice of potential problems and changes— such as it did Reuben Mark at Colgate-Palmolive—so they, too, can take action. Then, managers need to have appropriate responses (plans) in place if these unexpected events occur. Planning tools and techniques can help managers prepare confidently for the future. But they should remember that all the tools we’ve described in this chapter are just that— tools. They will never replace the manager’s skills and capabilities in using the information gained to develop effective and efficient plans. | PLANNING TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES MODULE REVIEW AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. Describe the different approaches to assessing the environment. 2. Describe the four techniques for allocating resources. 3. How does PERT network analysis work? 4. Why is flexibility so important to today’s planning techniques? 5. What is project management, and what are the steps managers use in planning projects? 6. “It’s a waste of time and other resources to develop a set of sophisticated scenarios for situations that may never occur.” Do you agree or disagree? Support your position. 7. Do intuition and creativity have any relevance in quantitative planning tools and techniques? Explain. 8. The Wall Street Journal and other business periodicals often carry reports of companies that have not met their sales or profit forecasts. What are some reasons a company might not meet its forecast? What suggestions could you make for improving the effectiveness of forecasting? 9. In what ways is managing a project different from managing a department or other structured work area? In what ways are they the same? 10. What might be some early warning signs of (a) a new competitor coming into your market, (b) an employee work stoppage, or (c) a new technology that could change demand for your product? 261 10 chapter Let’s Get Real: Meet the Manager Cindy Brewer Customer Contact Channel Manager Sears Holdings Corporation Loves Park, IL MY JOB: You’ll be hearing more from this real manager throughout the chapter. I am a customer contact channel manager at Sears Holdings Corporation, and my main focus is on process improvement. BEST PART OF MY JOB: Being able to drive process improvements that positively impact the customer and employee experience as well as increase revenue and reduce costs. Basic Organizational Design 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 Describe six key elements in organizational design. page 264 Contrast mechanistic and organic structures. page 273 Discuss the contingency factors that favor either the mechanistic model or the organic model of organizational design. page 274 Describe traditional organizational designs. page 277 LEARNING OUTCOMES WORST PART OF MY JOB: The inability to fix everything at once. BEST MANAGEMENT ADVICE EVER RECEIVED: The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over while expecting different results. Also, tell the truth always and be responsible. 263 A Manager’s Dilemma $10 billion. That’s how much Eli Lilly & innovation and how to make [product develop- Co. stands to lose in annual revenues ment] pipelines more productive.” Developing new between now and 2016 as three of its products and moving them forward as quickly as major drug patents expire.1 Replac- possible on the thorough and mandatory approval ing that revenue is high on the list of process, which can be agonizingly slow, is critical “must-do’s” for CEO John Lechleiter. to the company’s present and future success. The solution is speeding up the pace One action Lechleiter took was revamping the of drug development, but his chal- company’s operational structure into five global lenge is how? business units: oncology, diabetes, established mar- Unlike its global competitors that kets, emerging markets, and animal health. Part of have addressed similar product de- the restructuring also involved creating an improved velopment challenges by using product research and development center. Now, large-scale mergers and acquisi- what other organizational design elements might tions, Lechleiter’s focus has been on Lechleiter use to ensure that Lilly achieves its goal of acquiring smaller drug companies. speeding up its product development process? He said large-scale combinations “provide short-term relief but don’t fundamentally address the issue of What Would You Do? Replacing $10 billion in revenue can’t and won’t be easy. However, Lilly’s CEO, John Lechleiter, understands the importance of organizational structure and design, especially when it comes to the difficult product development challenges facing his company. His initial restructuring actions are ones that many companies undergo when faced with radical environmental challenges in an attempt to become a stronger, more successful organization. His actions also illustrate the importance of designing or redesigning a structure that helps an organization accomplish its goals efficiently and effectively. In this chapter, we’ll look at what’s involved with that. LEARNING OUTCOME Describe six key elements in organizational design. 264 10.1 Designing Organizational Structure A short distance south of McAlester, Oklahoma, employees in a vast factory complex make products that must be perfect. These people “are so good at what they do and have been doing it for so long that they have a 100 percent market share.”2 They make bombs for the U.S. military and doing so requires a work environment that’s an interesting mix of the mundane, structured, and disciplined, coupled with high levels of risk and emotion. The work gets done efficiently and effectively here. Work also gets done efficiently and effectively at Cisco Systems although not in such a structured and formal way. At Cisco, some 70 percent of the employees work from home at least 20 percent of the time.3 Both of these organizations get needed work done although each does so using a different structure. Few topics in management have undergone as much change in the past few years as that of organizing and organizational structure. Managers are reevaluating traditional approaches to find new structural designs that best support and facilitate employees’ doing the organization’s work—designs that can achieve efficiency but are also flexible. The basic concepts of organization design formulated by early management writers, such as Henri Fayol and Max Weber, offered structural principles for managers to follow. (Those principles are described on pp. 31–32.) Over 90 years have passed since many of those principles were originally proposed. Given that length of time and all the changes that have taken place, you’d think that those principles would be pretty worthless today. Surprisingly, they’re not. For the most part, they still provide valuable insights into designing effective and efficient organizations. Of course, we’ve also gained a great deal of knowledge over the years as to their limitations. CHAPTER 10 | BASIC ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN 265 EXHIBIT 10-1 • • • • • • • Divides work to be done into specific jobs and departments. Assigns tasks and responsibilities associated with individual jobs. Coordinates diverse organizational tasks. Clusters jobs into units. Establishes relationships among individuals, groups, and departments. Establishes formal lines of authority. Allocates and deploys organizational resources. Purposes of Organizing In Chapter 1 we defined organizing as arranging and structuring work to accomplish organizational goals. It’s an important process during which managers design an organization’s structure. Organizational structure is the formal arrangement of jobs within an organization. This structure, which can be shown visually in an organizational chart, also serves many purposes. (See Exhibit 10-1.) When managers create or change the structure, they’re engaged in organizational design, a process that involves decisions about six key elements: work specialization, departmentalization, chain of command, span of control, centralization and decentralization, and formalization.4 Work Specialization At the Wilson Sporting Goods factory in Ada, Ohio, 150 workers (with an average tenure exceeding 20 years) make every football used in the National Football League and most of those used in college and high school football games. To meet daily output goals, the workers specialize in job tasks such as molding, stitching and sewing, lacing, and so forth.5 This is an example of work specialization, which is dividing work activities into separate job tasks. Individual employees “specialize” in doing part of an activity rather than the entire activity in order to increase work output. It’s also known as division of labor, a concept we introduced in the management history module. Work specialization makes efficient use of the diversity of skills that workers have. In most organizations, some tasks require highly developed skills; others can be performed by employees with lower skill levels. If all workers were engaged in all the steps of, say, a manufacturing process, all would need the skills necessary to perform both the most demanding and the least demanding jobs. Thus, except when performing the most highly skilled or highly sophisticated tasks, employees would be working below their skill levels. In addition, skilled workers are paid more than unskilled workers, and, because wages tend to reflect the highest level of skill, all workers would be paid at highly skilled rates to do easy tasks—an inefficient use of resources. This concept explains why you rarely find a cardiac surgeon closing up a patient after surgery. Instead, doctors doing their residencies in openheart surgery and learning the skill usually stitch and staple the patient after the surgeon has finished the surgery. Early proponents of work specialization believed that it could lead to great increases in productivity. At the beginning of the twentieth century, that generalization was reasonable. Because specialization was not widely practiced, its introduction almost always generated higher productivity. But, as Exhibit 10-2 illustrates, a good thing can be carried too far. At some point, the human diseconomies from division of labor—boredom, fatigue, stress, low productivity, poor quality, increased absenteeism, and high turnover—exceed the economic advantages.6 organizing organizational chart work specialization Arranging and structuring work to accomplish the organization’s goals The visual representation of an organization’s structure Dividing work activities into separate job tasks organizational structure organizational design The formal arrangement of jobs within an organization Creating or changing an organization’s structure 266 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING EXHIBIT 10-2 Economies and Diseconomies of Work Specialization High Productivity Impact from human diseconomies Impact from economies of specialization Low Low High Work Specialization TODAY’S VIEW. Most managers today continue to see work specialization as important because it helps employees be more efficient. For example, McDonald’s uses high work specialization to get its products made and delivered to customers efficiently and quickly— that’s why it’s called “fast” food. One person takes orders at the drive-through window, others cook and assemble the hamburgers, another works the fryer, another gets the drinks, another bags orders, and so forth. Such single-minded focus on maximizing efficiency has contributed to increasing productivity. In fact, at many McDonald’s, you’ll see a clock that times how long it takes employees to fill the order; look closer and you’ll probably see posted somewhere an order fulfillment time goal. At some point, however, work specialization no longer leads to productivity. That’s why companies such as Avery-Dennison, Ford Australia, Hallmark, and American Express use minimal work specialization and instead give employees a broad range of tasks to do. Departmentalization Does your college have a department of student services or financial aid department? Are you taking this course through a management department? After deciding what job tasks will be done by whom, common work activities need to be grouped back together so work gets done in a coordinated and integrated way. How jobs are grouped together is called departmentalization. Five common forms of departmentalization are used, although an organization may develop its own unique classification. (For instance, a hotel might have departments such as front desk operations, sales and catering, housekeeping and laundry, and maintenance.) Exhibit 10-3 illustrates each type of departmentalization as well as the advantages and disadvantages of each. TODAY’S VIEW. Most large organizations continue to use combinations of most or all of these types of departmentalization. For example, a major Japanese electronics firm organizes its divisions along functional lines, its manufacturing units around processes, its sales units around seven geographic regions, and its sales regions into four customer groupings. Black & Decker organizes its divisions along functional lines, its manufacturing units around processes, its sales around geographic regions, and its sales regions around customer groupings. EXHIBIT 10-3 The Five Common Forms of Departmentalization departmentalization The basis by which jobs are grouped together 267 268 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING One popular departmentalization trend is the increasing use of customer departmentalization. Because getting and keeping customers is essential for success, this approach works well because it emphasizes monitoring and responding to changes in customers’ needs. Another popular trend is the use of teams, especially as work tasks have become more complex and diverse skills are needed to accomplish those tasks. One specific type of team that more organizations are using is a cross-functional team, which is a work team composed of individuals from various functional specialties. For instance, at Ford’s material planning and logistics division, a cross-functional team of employees from the company’s finance, purchasing, engineering, and quality control areas, along with representatives from outside logistics suppliers, has developed several work improvement ideas.7 We’ll discuss crossfunctional teams (and all types of teams) more fully in Chapter 13. Chain of Command Suppose you were at work and had a problem with some issue that came up. What would you do? Who would you go to help you resolve that issue? People need to know who their boss is. That’s what the chain of command is all about. The chain of command is the line of authority extending from upper organizational levels to lower levels, which clarifies who reports to whom. Managers need to consider it when organizing work because it helps employees with questions such as “Who do I report to?” or “Who do I go to if I have a problem?” To understand the chain of command, you have to understand three other important concepts: authority, responsibility, and unity of command. Let’s look first at authority. AUTHORITY. Authority was a major concept discussed by the early management writers; they viewed it as the glue that held an organization together. Authority refers to the rights inherent in a managerial position to tell people what to do and to expect them to do it.8 Managers in the chain of command had authority to do their job of coordinating and overseeing the work of others. Authority could be delegated downward to lower-level managers, giving them certain rights while also prescribing certain limits within which to operate. These writers emphasized that authority was related to one’s position within an organization and had nothing to do with the personal characteristics of an individual manager. They assumed that the rights and power inherent in one’s formal organizational position were the sole source of influence and that if an order was given, it would be obeyed. Another early management writer, Chester Barnard, proposed another perspective on authority. This view, called the acceptance theory of authority, says that authority comes from the willingness of subordinates to accept it.9 If an employee didn’t accept a manager’s Early management writer Chester Barnard proposed that authority comes from the willingness of subordinates to accept it. The Jamba Juice employees shown here (in white T-shirts) illustrate Barnard’s acceptance theory of authority by putting their raised hands together with their manager as a sign of unity following a business meeting. Barnard’s view of authority contends that subordinates will accept orders when they understand the order, when they view the order as being consistent with the organization’s purpose, when the orders do not conflict with their personal beliefs, and when they are able to perform the task as directed. CHAPTER 10 | BASIC ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN 269 order, there was no authority. Barnard contended that subordinates will accept orders only if the following conditions are satisfied: 1. They understand the order. 2. They feel the order is consistent with the organization’s purpose. 3. The order does not conflict with their personal beliefs. 4. They are able to perform the task as directed. Barnard’s view of authority seems to make sense, especially when it comes to an employee’s ability to do what he or she is being told to do. For instance, if my manager (my department chair) came into my classroom and told me to do open-heart surgery on one of my students, the traditional view of authority said that I would have to follow that order. Barnard’s view would say, instead, that I would talk to my manager about my lack of education and experience to do what he’s asked me to do and that it’s probably not in the best interests of the student (or our department) for me to follow that order. Yes, this is an extreme—and highly unrealistic—example. However, it does point out that simply viewing a manager’s authority as total control over what an employee does or doesn’t do is unrealistic also, except in certain circumstances like the military where soldiers are expected to follow their commander’s orders. However, do understand that Barnard believed most employees would do what their managers asked them to do if they were able to do so. The early management writers also distinguished between two forms of authority: line authority and staff authority. Line authority entitles a manager to direct the work of an employee. It is the employer–employee authority relationship that extends from the top of the organization to the lowest echelon, according to the chain of command, as shown in Exhibit 10-4. As a link in the chain of command, a manager with line authority has the right to direct the work of employees and to make certain decisions without consulting anyone. Of course, in the chain of command, every manager is also subject to the authority or direction of his or her superior. EXHIBIT 10-4 Chain of Command and Line Authority Chief Executive Officer Executive Vice President District A Executive Vice President President Vice President Vice President Vice President Vice President Vice President Region 1 Region 2 Region 3 Region 4 Region 5 District B District C District D District E District F District G cross-functional team authority line authority A work team composed of individuals from various functional specialties The rights inherent in a managerial position to tell people what to do and to expect them to do it Authority that entitles a manager to direct the work of an employee chain of command acceptance theory of authority The line of authority extending from upper organizational levels to the lowest levels, which clarifies who reports to whom The view that authority comes from the willingness of subordinates to accept it 270 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING Keep in mind that sometimes the term line is used to differentiate line managers from staff managers. In this context, line refers to managers whose organizational function contributes directly to the achievement of organizational objectives. In a manufacturing firm, line managers are typically in the production and sales functions, whereas managers in human resources and payroll are considered staff managers with staff authority. Whether a manager’s function is classified as line or staff depends on the organization’s objectives. For example, at Staff Builders, a supplier of temporary employees, interviewers have a line function. Similarly, at the payroll firm of ADP, payroll is a line function. As organizations get larger and more complex, line managers find that they do not have the time, expertise, or resources to get their jobs done effectively. In response, they create staff authority functions to support, assist, advise, and generally reduce some of their informational burdens. For instance, a hospital administrator who cannot effectively handle the purchasing of all the supplies the hospital needs creates a purchasing department, which is a staff function. Of course, the head of the purchasing department has line authority over the purchasing agents who work for him. The hospital administrator might also find that she is overburdened and needs an assistant, a position that would be classified as a staff position. Exhibit 10-5 illustrates line and staff authority. RESPONSIBILITY. When managers use their authority to assign work to employees, those employees take on an obligation to perform those assigned duties. This obligation or expectation to perform is known as responsibility. And employees should be held accountable for their performance! Assigning work authority without responsibility and accountability can create opportunities for abuse. Likewise, no one should be held responsible or accountable for work tasks over which he or she has no authority to complete those tasks. UNITY OF COMMAND. Finally, the unity of command principle (one of Fayol’s 14 management principles) states that a person should report to only one manager. Without unity of command, conflicting demands from multiple bosses may create problems as it did for Damian Birkel, a merchandising manager in the Fuller Brands division of CPAC, Inc. He found himself reporting to two bosses—one in charge of the department-store business and the other in charge of discount chains. Birkel tried to minimize the conflict by making a combined to-do list that he would update and change as work tasks changed.10 TODAY’S VIEW. Although early management theorists (Fayol, Weber, Taylor, Barnard, and others) believed that chain of command, authority (line and staff), responsibility, and unity of EXHIBIT 10-5 Line Versus Staff Authority Executive Director Line authority Assistant to the Executive Director Staff authority Director of Human Resources Director of Operations Director of Purchasing Unit 1 Manager Other Human Resources Operations Other Directors Unit 2 Manager Purchasing Human Resources Operations Purchasing Other CHAPTER 10 | BASIC ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN command were essential, times have changed.11 Those elements are far less important today. For example, at the Michelin plant in Tours, France, managers have replaced the top-down chain of command with “birdhouse” meetings, in which employees meet for five minutes at regular intervals throughout the day at a column on the shop floor and study simple tables and charts to identify production bottlenecks. Instead of being bosses, shop managers are enablers.12 Information technology also has made such concepts less relevant today. Employees can access information that used to be available only to managers in a matter of a few seconds. It also means that employees can communicate with anyone else in the organization without going through the chain of command. Also, many employees, especially in organizations where work revolves around projects, find themselves reporting to more than one boss, thus violating the unity of command principle. However, such arrangements can and do work if communication, conflict, and other issues are managed well by all involved parties. Span of Control How many employees can a manager efficiently and effectively manage? That’s what span of control is all about. The traditional view was that managers could not—and should not— directly supervise more than five or six subordinates. Determining the span of control is important because to a large degree, it determines the number of levels and managers in an organization—an important consideration in how efficient an organization will be. All other things being equal, the wider or larger the span, the more efficient an organization is. Here’s why. Assume two organizations, both of which have approximately 4,100 employees. As Exhibit 10-6 shows, if one organization has a span of four and the other a span of eight, the organization with the wider span will have two fewer levels and approximately 800 fewer managers. At an average manager’s salary of $42,000 a year, the organization with the wider span would save over $33 million a year! Obviously, wider spans are more efficient in terms of cost. However, at some point, wider spans may reduce effectiveness if employee performance worsens because managers no longer have the time to lead effectively. TODAY’S VIEW. The contemporary view of span of control recognizes that there is no magic number. Many factors influence the number of employees that a manager can efficiently and effectively manage. These factors include the skills and abilities of the manager and the EXHIBIT 10-6 Organizational Level Members at Each Level Contrasting Spans of Control (Highest) Assuming Span of 4 Assuming Span of 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 4 16 64 256 1,024 4,096 1 8 64 512 4,096 (Lowest) Span of 4: Employees: = 4,096 Managers (level 1–6) = 1,365 Span of 8: Employees: = 4,096 Managers (level 1–4) = 585 staff authority unity of command Positions with some authority that have been created to support, assist, and advise those holding line authority The management principle that each person should report to only one manager responsibility The number of employees a manager can efficiently and effectively manage The obligation or expectation to perform any assigned duties span of control 271 272 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING My span of control is zero—I have no associates who report directly to me. employees, and the characteristics of the work being done. For instance, managers with well-trained and experienced employees can function well with a wider span. Other contingency variables that determine the appropriate span include similarity and complexity of employee tasks, the physical proximity of subordinates, the degree to which standardized procedures are in place, the sophistication of the organization’s information system, the strength of the organization’s culture, and the preferred style of the manager.13 The trend in recent years has been toward larger spans of control, which is consistent with managers’ efforts to speed up decision making, increase flexibility, get closer to customers, empower employees, and reduce costs. Managers are beginning to recognize that they can handle a wider span when employees know their jobs well and when those employees understand organizational processes. For instance, at PepsiCo’s Gamesa cookie plant in Mexico, 56 employees now report to each manager. However, to ensure that performance doesn’t suffer because of these wider spans, employees were thoroughly briefed on company goals and processes. Also, new pay systems reward quality, service, productivity, and teamwork.14 Centralization and Decentralization One of the questions that needs to be answered when organizing is “At what organizational level are decisions made?” Centralization is the degree to which decision making takes place at upper levels of the organization. If top managers make key decisions with little input from below, then the organization is more centralized. On the other hand, the more that lower-level employees provide input or actually make decisions, the more decentralization there is. Keep in mind that centralization-decentralization is not an either-or concept. The decision is relative, not absolute—that is, an organization is never completely centralized or decentralized. Early management writers proposed that the degree of centralization in an organization depended on the situation.15 Their goal was the optimum and efficient use of employees. Traditional organizations were structured in a pyramid, with power and authority concentrated near the top of the organization. Given this structure, historically centralized decisions were the most prominent, but organizations today have become more complex and responsive to dynamic changes in their environments. As such, many managers believe that decisions need to be made by those individuals closest to the problems, regardless of their organizational level. In fact, the trend over the past several decades—at least in U.S. and Canadian organizations— has been a movement toward more decentralization in organizations.16 Exhibit 10-7 lists some of the factors that affect an organization’s use of centralization or decentralization.17 TODAY’S VIEW. Today, managers often choose the amount of centralization or decentralization that will allow them to best implement their decisions and achieve organizational goals.18 What works in one organization, however, won’t necessarily work in another, so managers must determine the appropriate amount of decentralization for each organization and work units within it. EXHIBIT 10-7 Centralization or Decentralization More Centralization More Decentralization • Environment is stable. • Lower-level managers are not as capable or experienced at making decisions as upper-level managers. • Lower-level managers do not want a say in decisions. • Decisions are relatively minor. • Organization is facing a crisis or the risk of company failure. • Company is large. • Effective implementation of company strategies depends on managers retaining say over what happens. • Environment is complex, uncertain. • Lower-level managers are capable and experienced at making decisions. • Lower-level managers want a voice in decisions. • Decisions are significant. • Corporate culture is open to allowing managers a say in what happens. • Company is geographically dispersed. • Effective implementation of company strategies depends on managers having involvement and flexibility to make decisions. CHAPTER 10 | BASIC ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN As organizations have become more flexible and responsive to environmental trends, there’s been a distinct shift toward decentralized decision making.19 This trend, also known as employee empowerment, gives employees more authority (power) to make decisions. (We’ll address this concept more thoroughly in our discussion of leadership in Chapter 17.) In large companies especially, lower-level managers are “closer to the action” and typically have more detailed knowledge about problems and how best to solve them than do top managers. For instance, at Terex Corporation, CEO Ron Defeo, a big proponent of decentralized management, tells his managers that, “You gotta run the company you’re given.” And they have! The company generated revenues of over $4 billion in 2009 with about 16,000 employees worldwide and a small corporate headquarters staff.20 Another example can be seen at the General Cable plant in Piedras Negras, Coahuila, Mexico, where employees are responsible for managing nearly 6,000 active raw material SKUs (stock-keeping units) in inventory and on the plant floor. And company managers continue to look for ways to place more responsibility in the hands of workers.21 Formalization Formalization refers to how standardized an organization’s jobs are and the extent to which employee behavior is guided by rules and procedures. In highly formalized organizations, there are explicit job descriptions, numerous organizational rules, and clearly defined procedures covering work processes. Employees have little discretion over what’s done, when it’s done, and how it’s done. However, where formalization is low, employees have more discretion in how they do their work. 273 by the numbers 24 34 percent of HR executives said that they had retrained employees for new positions over the last six months. 68 51 42 55 percent of organizations say they’ve increased centralization in the last five years. percent of white-collar workers say that teleworking is a good idea. percent of U.S. companies offer some form of telework arrangement. percent of workers believe that their work quality is perceived the same when working remotely as when working in the office. TODAY’S VIEW. Although some formalization is necessary for consistency and control, many organizations today rely less on strict rules and standardization to guide and regulate employee behavior. For instance, consider the following situation: A customer comes into a branch of a large national drug store and drops off a role of film for same-day developing 37 minutes after the store policy cut-off time. Although the sales clerk knows he’s supposed to follow rules, he also knows he could get the film developed with no problem and wants to accommodate the customer. So he accepts the film, violating policy, hoping that his manager won’t find out.22 Has this employee done something wrong? He did “break” the rule. But by “breaking” the rule, he actually brought in revenue and provided good customer service. Considering there are numerous situations where rules may be too restrictive, many organizations have allowed employees some latitude, giving them sufficient autonomy to make those decisions that they feel are best under the circumstances. It doesn’t mean throwing out all organizational rules because there will be rules that are important for employees to follow—and these rules should be explained so employees understand why it’s important to adhere to them. But for other rules, employees may be given some leeway.23 Mechanistic and Organic Structures Stocking extra swimsuits in retail stores near water parks seems to make sense, right? And if size 11 women’s shoes have been big sellers in Chicago, then stocking more size 11s seems to be a no-brainer. After suffering through 16 months of declining same-store sales, Macy’s CEO Terry Lundgren decided it was time to restructure the organization to centralization employee empowerment The degree to which decision making is concentrated at upper levels of the organization Giving employees more authority (power) to make decisions decentralization The degree to which lower-level employees provide input or actually make decisions formalization How standardized an organization’s jobs are and the extent to which employee behavior is guided by rules and procedures 10.2 LEARNING OUTCOME Contrast mechanistic and organic structures. 274 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING EXHIBIT 10-8 Mechanistic Versus Organic Organizations My organization is definitely mechanistic. We’re a large, multidivisional organization. 10.3 LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss the contingency factors that favor either the mechanistic model or the organic model of organizational design. Mechanistic Organic • High specialization • Rigid departmentalization • Clear chain of command • Narrow spans of control • Centralization • High formalization • Cross-functional teams • Cross-hierarchical teams • Free flow of information • Wide spans of control • Decentralization • Low formalization make sure that these types of smart retail decisions are made.25 He’s making the company both more centralized and more locally focused. Although that may seem a contradiction, the redesign seems to be working. Lundgren centralized Macy’s purchasing, planning, and marketing operations from seven regional offices to one office at headquarters in New York. He also replaced regional merchandise managers with more local managers— each responsible for a dozen stores—who spend more time figuring out what’s selling. Designing (or redesigning) an organizational structure that works is important. Basic organizational design revolves around two organizational forms that are described in Exhibit 10-8.26 The mechanistic organization (or bureaucracy) was the natural result of combining the six elements of structure. Adhering to the chain-of-command principle ensured the existence of a formal hierarchy of authority, with each person controlled and supervised by one superior. Keeping the span of control small at increasingly higher levels in the organization created tall, impersonal structures. As the distance between the top and the bottom of the organization expanded, top management would increasingly impose rules and regulations. Because top managers couldn’t control lower-level activities through direct observation and ensure the use of standard practices, they substituted rules and regulations. The early management writers’ belief in a high degree of work specialization created jobs that were simple, routine, and standardized. Further specialization through the use of departmentalization increased impersonality and the need for multiple layers of management to coordinate the specialized departments. The organic organization is a highly adaptive form that is as loose and flexible as the mechanistic organization is rigid and stable. Rather than having standardized jobs and regulations, the organic organization’s loose structure allows it to change rapidly as required.27 It has division of labor, but the jobs people do are not standardized. Employees tend to be professionals who are technically proficient and trained to handle diverse problems. They need few formal rules and little direct supervision because their training has instilled in them standards of professional conduct. For instance, a petroleum engineer doesn’t need to follow specific procedures on how to locate oil sources miles offshore. The engineer can solve most problems alone or after conferring with colleagues. Professional standards guide his or her behavior. The organic organization is low in centralization so that the professional can respond quickly to problems and because top-level managers cannot be expected to possess the expertise to make necessary decisions. Contingency Factors Affecting Structural Choice When Carol Bartz took over the CEO position at Yahoo! from cofounder Jerry Yang, she found a company “hobbled by slow decision making and ineffective execution on those decisions.” 28 Bartz said, “There’s plenty that has bogged this company down.” For a company that was once the darling of Web search, Yahoo! seemed to have lost its way, a serious misstep in an industry where change is continual and rapid. Bartz implemented a new streamlined structure that was intended to “make the company a CHAPTER 10 | BASIC ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN 275 lot faster on its feet.” Top managers typically put a lot of thought into designing an appropriate organizational structure. What that appropriate structure is depends on four contingency variables: the organization’s strategy, size, technology, and degree of environmental uncertainty. Strategy and Structure An organization’s structure should facilitate goal achievement. Because goals are an important part of the organization’s strategies, it’s only logical that strategy and structure are closely linked. Alfred Chandler initially researched this relationship.29 He studied several large U.S. companies and concluded that changes in corporate strategy led to changes in an organization’s structure that support the strategy. Research has shown that certain structural designs work best with different organizational strategies.30 For instance, the flexibility and free-flowing information of the organic structure works well when an organization is pursuing meaningful and unique innovations. The mechanistic organization with its efficiency, stability, and tight controls works best for companies wanting to tightly control costs. Size and Structure There’s considerable evidence that an organization’s size affects its structure.31 Large organizations—typically considered to be those with more than 2,000 employees—tend to have more specialization, departmentalization, centralization, and rules and regulations than do small organizations. However, once an organization grows past a certain size, size has less influence on structure. Why? Essentially, once there are around 2,000 employees, it’s already fairly mechanistic. Adding another 500 employees won’t impact the structure much. On the other hand, adding 500 employees to an organization that has only 300 employees is likely to make it more mechanistic. Technology and Structure Every organization uses some form of technology to convert its inputs into outputs. For instance, workers at Whirlpool’s Manaus, Brazil, facility build microwave ovens and air conditioners on a standardized assembly line. Employees at FedEx Kinko’s Office and Print Services produce custom design and print jobs for individual customers. Typically organizations with a routine technology adapt a mechanistic structure and those with a nonroutine technology adapt an organic structure. With a more routine technology for transforming inputs into outputs, firms such as insurance companies and banks most often have a mechanistic structure. The bank teller shown here, serving a customer at Nuestro Banco, processes routine transactions such as cashing checks and making deposits, withdrawals, and loan payments. The bank’s structure is characterized by rules and regulations, a high degree of work specialization, a formal hierarchy, a small span of control, and departments organized by functions. mechanistic organization organic organization An organizational design that’s rigid and tightly controlled An organizational design that’s highly adaptive and flexible 276 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING “On the wall behind the desk of Andrea Jung, the CEO of Avon, a beauty company, hangs a plaque labeled ‘The Evolution of Leadership.’ It displays four footprints: that of an ape, then a barefoot man, then a man’s shoe and finally a high-heeled shoe.”35 It’s an interesting symbol, and it wasn’t put there by Jung. No, it was hanging in the office of the previous CEO, James Preston. As the first female CEO of Avon, Jung has held that position for a decade—the most-tenured female CEO in the Fortune 500. And she’s faced numerous managerial challenges head-on. She clearly understands the importance of organizational design in helping her global company prosper in good times and bad. That aspect of her job is particularly challenging given the fact that 70 percent of the company’s sales are in developing countries. But she’s made the tough decisions to restructure, refocus, and redefine the company’s strategies and created an organizational design to help it continue its success as the lead- And employees at Bayer’s facility in Karachi, Pakistan, are involved in producing pharmaceuticals on a continuousflow production line. The initial research on technology’s effect on structure can be traced to Joan Woodward, who studied small manufacturing firms in southern England to determine the extent to which structural design elements were related to organizational success.32 She couldn’t find any consistent pattern until she divided the firms into three distinct technologies that had increasing levels of complexity and sophistication. The first category, unit production, described the production of items in units or small batches. The second category, mass production, described large-batch manufacturing. Finally, the third and most technically complex group, process production, included continuousprocess production. A summary of her findings is shown in Exhibit 10-9. Other studies also have shown that organizations adapt their structures to their technology depending on how routine their technology is for transforming inputs into outputs.33 In general, the more routine the technology, the more mechanistic the structure can be, and organizations with more nonroutine technology are more likely to have organic structures.34 ing women’s beauty products company. Environmental Uncertainty and Structure Some organizations face stable and simple environments with little uncertainty; others face dynamic and complex environments with a lot of uncertainty. Managers try to minimize environmental uncertainty by adjusting the organization’s structure.36 In stable and simple environments, mechanistic designs can be more effective. On the other hand, the greater the uncertainty, the more an organization needs the flexibility of an organic design. For example, the uncertain nature of the oil industry means that oil companies need to be flexible. Soon after being named CEO of Royal Dutch Shell PLC, Jeroen van der Veer streamlined the corporate structure to counteract some of the industry volatility. One thing he did was eliminate the company’s cumbersome, overly analytical process of making deals with OPEC countries and other major oil producers.37 TODAY’S VIEW. The evidence on the environment-structure relationship helps explain why so many managers today are restructuring their organizations to be lean, fast, and flexible. Worldwide economic downturns, global competition, accelerated product innovation by competitors, and increased demands from customers for high quality and faster deliveries are examples of dynamic environmental forces. EXHIBIT 10-9 Woodward’s Findings on Technology and Structure Structural characteristics: Most effective structure: Unit Production Mass Production Process Production Low vertical differentiation Moderate vertical differentiation High vertical differentiation Low horizontal differentiation High horizontal differentiation Low horizontal differentiation Low formalization High formalization Low formalization Organic Mechanistic Organic CHAPTER 10 | BASIC ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN 277 Mechanistic organizations are not equipped to respond to rapid environmental change and environmental uncertainty. As a result, we’re seeing organizations become more organic. Traditional Organizational Designs They’re a big hit with the elementary-school crowd and millions of them have been sold every month. Ever heard of Silly Bandz?38 If you’re over the age of 10, you probably haven’t! These colorful rubber bands retain the shapes they’re twisted in and kids love them. The small business that created Silly Bands—BCP Imports of Toledo, Ohio— increased its employee count from 20 to 200 over the last year and recently added 22 phone lines to keep up with inquiries. The person behind those organizing decisions is company president Robert Croak. In making structural decisions, managers have some common designs from which to choose. In this chapter, we’re going to describe the traditional organizational designs. In the next chapter, we’ll be looking at more contemporary types of organizational designs. When designing a structure, managers may choose one of the traditional organizational designs. These structures tend to be more mechanistic in nature. A summary of the strengths and weaknesses of each can be found in Exhibit 10-10. 10.4 LEARNING OUTCOME Describe traditional organizational designs. Simple Structure Most companies start as entrepreneurial ventures using a simple structure, which is an organizational design with low departmentalization, wide spans of control, authority centralized in a single person, and little formalization.39 As employees are added, however, most don’t remain as simple structures. The structure tends to become more specialized and formalized. Rules and regulations are introduced, work becomes specialized, departments are created, levels of management are added, and the organization becomes increasingly bureaucratic. At this point, managers might choose a functional structure or a divisional structure. EXHIBIT 10-10 Simple Structure Traditional Organizational Designs • Strengths: Fast; flexible; inexpensive to maintain; clear accountability. • Weaknesses: Not appropriate as organization grows; reliance on one person is risky. Functional Structure • Strengths: Cost-saving advantages from specialization (economies of scale, minimal duplication of people and equipment); employees are grouped with others who have similar tasks. • Weaknesses: Pursuit of functional goals can cause managers to lose sight of what’s best for the overall organization; functional specialists become insulated and have little understanding of what other units are doing. Divisional Structure • Strengths: Focuses on results—division managers are responsible for what happens to their products and services. • Weaknesses: Duplication of activities and resources increases costs and reduces efficiency. unit production process production The production of items in units or small batches The production of items in continuous processes mass production simple structure The production of items in large batches An organizational design with low departmentalization, wide spans of control, centralized authority, and little formalization 278 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING Functional Structure A functional structure is an organizational design that groups similar or related occupational specialties together. You can think of this structure as functional departmentalization applied to the entire organization. Divisional Structure The divisional structure is an organizational structure made up of separate business units or divisions.40 In this structure, each division has limited autonomy, with a division manager who has authority over his or her unit and is responsible for performance. In divisional structures, however, the parent corporation typically acts as an external overseer to coordinate and control the various divisions, and often provides support services such as financial and legal. Walmart, for example, has two divisions: retail (Walmart Stores, International, Sam’s Clubs, and others) and support (distribution centers). Hopefully, you’ve seen in this chapter that organizational structure and design (or redesign) are important managerial tasks. Also, we hope that you recognize that organizing decisions aren’t only important for upper-level managers. Managers at all levels may have to deal with work specialization or authority or span of control decisions. In the next chapter, we’ll continue our discussion of the organizing function by looking at contemporary organizational designs. functional structure divisional structure An organizational design that groups together similar or related occupational specialties An organizational structure made up of separate, semiautonomous units or divisions CHAPTER 10 | BASIC ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN Let’s Get Real: What Would You Do? My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma, page 264 With Lechleiter’s revamping of the company’s operational structure, he needs to consider how to organize each of these departments. • Create a divisional structure for each of the five global business units. • Utilize a more organic structure for the teams that will be developing the new products in the product research and development center. • Employ a more mechanistic structure for those associates who will be driving the products through the mandatory approval process. • Create cross-functional teams across the business units to share best practices and key learning to increase the product development process. 279 Cindy Brewer Customer Contact Channel Manager Sears Holdings Corporation Loves Park, IL PREPARING FOR: Exams/Quizzes CHAPTER SUMMARY by Learning Outcomes LEARNING OUTCOME 10.1 Describe six key elements in organizational design. The key elements in organizational design are work specialization, chain of command, span of control, departmentalization, centralization-decentralization, and formalization. Traditionally, work specialization was viewed as a way to divide work activities into separate job tasks. Today’s view is that it is an important organizing mechanism but it can lead to problems. The chain of command and its companion concepts—authority, responsibility, and unity of command—were viewed as important ways of maintaining control in organizations. The contemporary view is that they are less relevant in today’s organizations. The traditional view of span of control was that managers should directly supervise no more than five to six individuals. The contemporary view is that the span of control depends on the skills and abilities of the manager and the employees and on the characteristics of the situation. The various forms of departmentalization are as follows: Functional groups jobs by functions performed; product groups jobs by product lines; geographical groups jobs by geographical region; process groups jobs on product or customer flow; and customer groups jobs on specific and unique customer groups. Authority refers to the rights inherent in a managerial position to tell people what to do and to expect them to do it. The acceptance view of authority says that authority comes from the willingness of subordinates to accept it. Line authority entitles a manager to direct the work of an employee. Staff authority refers to functions that support, assist, advise, and generally reduce some of managers’ informational burdens. Responsibility is the obligation or expectation to perform assigned duties. Unity of command states that a person should report to only one manager. Centralization-decentralization is a structural decision about who makes decisions—upper-level managers or lower-level employees. Formalization concerns the organization’s use of standardization and strict rules to provide consistency and control. LEARNING OUTCOME 10.2 Contrast mechanistic and organic structures. A mechanistic organization is a rigid and tightly controlled structure. An organic organization is highly adaptive and flexible. LEARNING OUTCOME 10.3 Discuss the contingency factors that favor either the mechanistic model or the organic model of organizational design. An organization’s structure should support the strategy. If the strategy changes, the structure also should change. An organization’s size can affect its structure up to a certain point. Once an organization reaches a certain size (usually around 2,000 employees), it’s fairly mechanistic. An organization’s technology can affect its structure. An organic structure is most effective with unit production and process production technology. A mechanistic structure is most effective with mass production technology. The more uncertain an organization’s environment, the more it needs the flexibility of an organic design. LEARNING OUTCOME 10.4 Describe traditional organizational designs. A simple structure is one with low departmentalization, wide spans of control, authority centralized in a single person, and little formalization. A functional structure groups similar or related occupational specialties together. A divisional structure is made up of separate business units or divisions. 280 CHAPTER 10 | BASIC ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN 10.1 281 10.4 LEARNING OUTCOME REVIEW AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. Discuss the traditional and contemporary views of each of the six key elements of organizational design. 2. Can an organization’s structure be changed quickly? Why or why not? Should it be changed quickly? Explain. 3. Contrast mechanistic and organic organizations. 4. Would you rather work in a mechanistic or an organic organization? Why? 5. Explain the contingency factors that affect organizational design. 6. Contrast the three traditional organizational designs. 7. With the availability of advanced information technology that allows an organization’s work to be done anywhere at any time, is organizing still an important managerial function? Why or why not? 8. Researchers are now saying that efforts to simplify work tasks actually have negative results for both companies and their employees. Do you agree? Why or why not? ETHICS DILEMMA crisis management says, “Most companies that are smart are buying relevant search terms to increase their visibility on the Internet. As long as they are providing factual and timely information in a transparent way and doing interviews with other media sources as well, I don’t see any reason why they shouldn’t be buying search terms.” What do you think? Is this even an ethical issue? (Not the ramifications of the spill itself, but purchasing the search terms.) What ethical concerns do you see in BP doing this? What stakeholders might be affected by BP’s actions (buying the search terms)? In what ways might these stakeholders be affected? “As British Petroleum (BP) continues to try to stop the oil gushing into the Gulf of Mexico, the energy giant is also dealing with a public relations nightmare.”41 One step the company has taken is buying the Web search terms such as “oil spill” and “oil spill claims” on Google and Yahoo! A company spokeswoman says “the strategy is to assist those who are most impacted and help them find the right forms and the right people quickly and effectively.” One consultant who handles crisis management says, “I do it with all of my clients, because if we aren’t buying the terms, somebody else is.” Another individual who teaches SKILLS EXERCISE Developing Your Empowering People (Delegating) Skill About the Skill Managers get things done through other people. Because there are limits to any manager’s time and knowledge, effective managers need to understand how to delegate.42 Delegation is the assignment of authority to another person to carry out specific duties. It allows an employee to make decisions. Delegation should not be confused with participation. In participative decision making, authority is shared. In delegation, employees make decisions on their own. Steps in Practicing the Skill A number of actions differentiate the effective delegator from the ineffective delegator. The following five behaviors are used by effective delegators. 1. Clarify the assignment. Determine what is to be delegated and to whom. You need to identify the person who’s most capable of doing the task and then determine whether he or she has the time and motivation to do the task. If you have a willing and able employee, it’s your responsibility to provide clear information on what is being delegated, the results you expect, and any time or performance expectations you may have. Unless there’s an overriding need to adhere to specific methods, you should delegate only the results expected. Get agreement on what is to be 282 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING 2. 3. 4. 5. done and the results expected, but let the employee decide the best way to complete the task. Specify the employee’s range of discretion. Every situation of delegation comes with constraints. Although you’re delegating to an employee the authority to perform some task or tasks, you’re not delegating unlimited authority. You are delegating authority to act on certain issues within certain parameters. You need to specify what those parameters are so that employees know, without any doubt, the range of their discretion. Allow the employee to participate. One of the best ways to decide how much authority will be necessary to accomplish a task is to allow the employee who will be held accountable for that task to participate in that decision. Be aware, however, that allowing employees to participate can present its own set of potential problems as a result of employees’ self-interests and biases in evaluating their own abilities. Inform others that delegation has occurred. Delegation shouldn’t take place behind the scenes. Not only do the manager and employee need to know specifically what has been delegated and how much authority has been given, but so does anyone else who’s likely to be affected by the employee’s decisions and actions. This includes people inside and outside the organization. Essentially, you need to communicate what has been delegated (the task and amount of authority) and to whom. Establish feedback channels. To delegate without establishing feedback controls is inviting problems. The establishment of controls to monitor the employee’s performance increases the likelihood that important problems will be identified and that the task will be completed on time and to the desired specifications. WORKING TOGETHER Team Exercise An organization chart can be a useful tool for understanding certain aspects of an organization’s structure. Form small groups of three to four individuals. Among yourselves, choose an organization with which one of you is familiar Ideally, these controls should be determined at the time of the initial assignment. Agree on a specific time for the completion of the task and then set progress dates when the employee will report back on how well he or she is doing and any major problems that may have arisen. These controls can be supplemented with periodic checks to ensure that authority guidelines aren’t being abused, organizational policies are being followed, proper procedures are being met, and the like. Practicing the Skill Read through the following scenario. Write a paper describing how you would handle the situation described. Be sure to refer to the five behaviors described for delegating. Scenario Ricky Lee is the manager of the contracts group of a large regional office supply distributor. His boss, Anne Zumwalt, has asked him to prepare by the end of the month the department’s new procedures manual that will outline the steps followed in negotiating contracts with office products manufacturers who supply the organization’s products. Because Ricky has another major project he’s working on, he went to Anne and asked her if it would be possible to assign the rewriting of the procedures manual to Bill Harmon, one of his employees who’s worked in the contracts group for about three years. Anne said she had no problems with Ricky reassigning the project as long as Bill knew the parameters and the expectations for the completion of the project. Ricky is preparing for his meeting in the morning with Bill regarding this assignment. (where you work, a student organization to which you belong, your college or university, etc.). Draw an organization chart of this organization. Be careful to show departments (or groups) and especially be careful to get the chain of command correct. Be prepared to share your chart with the class. MY TURN TO BE A MANAGER Find three different examples of an organizational chart. (Company’s annual reports are a good place to look.) In a report, describe each of these. Try to decipher the organization’s use of organizational design elements, especially departmentalization, chain of command, centralization-decentralization, and formalization. Survey at least 10 different managers as to how many employees they supervise. Also ask them whether they feel they could supervise more employees or whether they feel the number they supervise is too many. Graph your survey results and write a report describing what you found. Draw some conclusions about span of control. CHAPTER 10 | BASIC ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN Using the organizational chart you created in the team exercise, redesign the structure. What structural changes might make this organization more efficient and effective? Write a report describing what you would do and why. Be sure to include an example of the original organizational chart as well as a chart of your proposed revision of the organizational structure. Steve’s and Mary’s suggested readings: Gary Hamel, The Future of Management (Harvard Business School Press, 2007); Thomas Friedman, The World Is Flat 3.0 (Picador, 2007); Harold J. Leavitt, Top Down: Why Hierarchies Are Here to Stay and How to Manage Them More Effectively (Harvard Business School Press, 2005); and Thomas W. Malone, The Future of Work (Harvard Business School Press, 2004). In your own words, write down three things you learned in this chapter about being a good manager. Self-knowledge can be a powerful learning tool. Go to mymanagementlab.com and complete these selfassessment exercises: How Well Do I Handle Ambiguity? What Type of Organizational Structure Do I Prefer? Do I Like Bureaucracy? How Good Am I at Playing Politics? How Willing Am I to Delegate? Using the results of your assessments, identify personal strengths and weaknesses. What will you do to reinforce your strengths and improve your weaknesses? CASE APPLICATION Ask Chuck T he Charles Schwab Corporation (Charles Schwab) is a San Francisco-based financial services company.43 Like many companies in that industry, Charles Schwab struggled during the economic recession. Founded in 1971 by its namesake as a discount brokerage, the company has now “grown up” into a full-service traditional brokerage firm, with more than 300 offices in some 45 states and in London and Hong Kong. It still offers discount brokerage services, but also financial research, advice, and planning; retirement plans; investment management; and proprietary financial products including mutual funds, mortgages, CDs, and other banking products through its Charles Schwab Bank unit. However, its primary business is still making stock trades for investors who make their own financial decisions. The company Effective communication with customers plays an important role in Charles Schwab’s customer service strategy. Managers of the company’s offices receive daily customer feedback reports and empower employees to respond quickly to customer concerns. has a reputation for being conservative, which helped it avoid the financial meltdown suffered by other investment firms. Founder Charles R. Schwab has a black bowling ball perched on his desk. “It’s a memento of the long-forgotten bubble of 1961, when shares of bowling-pin companies, shoemakers, chalk manufacturers, and lane operators were thought to be can’t-miss plays on the limitless potential of suburbia— and turned out to be duds.” He keeps the ball as a reminder not to “buy into hype or take excessive risks.” Like many companies, Charles Schwab is fanatical about customer service. By empowering front-line employees to respond fast to customer issues and concerns, Cheryl Pasquale, a manager at one of Schwab’s branches, is on the front line of Schwab’s efforts to prosper in a “resource-challenged economy.” Every workday morning, she pulls up a customer feedback report for her branch generated by a brief survey the investment firm e-mails out daily. The report allows her to review how well her six financial consultants handled the previous day’s transactions. She’s able to see comments of customers who gave both high and low marks and whether a particular transaction garnered praise or complaint. On one particular day, she notices that several customers commented on how difficult it was to use the branch’s in-house information kiosks. “She decides 283 284 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING she’ll ask her team for insights about this in their weekly meeting.” One thing that she pays particular attention to is a “manager alert—a special notice triggered by a client who has given Schwab a poor rating for a delay in posting a transaction to his account.” And she’s not alone. Every day, Pasquale and the managers at all the company’s branches receive this type of customer feedback. Discussion Questions 1. Describe and evaluate what Charles Schwab is doing. 2. How might the company’s culture of not buying into hype and not taking excessive risks affect its organizational structural design? 3. What structural implications—good and bad—might Schwab’s intense focus on customer feedback have? 4. Do you think this arrangement would work for other types of organizations? Why or why not? CASE APPLICATION A New Kind of Structure A dmit it. Sometimes the projects you’re working on (school, work, or both) can get pretty boring and monotonous. Wouldn’t it be great to have a magic button you could push to get someone else to do that boring, time-consuming stuff? At Pfizer, that “magic button” is a reality for a large number of employees.44 As a global pharmaceutical company, Pfizer is continually looking for ways to help employees be more efficient and effective. The company’s senior director of organizational effectiveness found that the “Harvard MBA staff we hired to develop strategies and innovate were instead Googling and making PowerPoints.” Indeed, internal studies conducted to find out just how much time its valuable talent was spending on menial tasks was startling. The average Pfizer employee was spending 20 percent to 40 percent of his or her time on support work (creating documents, typing notes, doing research, manipulating data, scheduling meetings) and only 60 percent to 80 percent on knowledge work (strategy, innovation, networking, collaborating, critical thinking). And the problem wasn’t just at lower levels. Even the highest-level employees were affected. Take, for instance, David Cain, an executive director for global engineering. He enjoys his job—assessing environmental real estate risks, managing facilities, and controlling a multimillion-dollar budget. But he didn’t so much enjoy having to go through spreadsheets and put together PowerPoints. Now, however, with Pfizer’s “magic button,” those tasks are passed off to individuals outside the organization. Just what is this “magic button?” Originally called the Office of the Future (OOF), the renamed PfizerWorks allows employees to shift tedious and time-consuming tasks with the click of a single button on their computer desktop. They describe what they need on an online form, which is then sent to one of two Indian serviceoutsourcing firms. When a request is received, a team member in India calls the Pfizer employee to clarify what’s needed and by when. The team member then e-mails back a cost specification for the requested work. If the Pfizer employee decides to proceed, the costs involved are charged to the employee’s department. About this unique arrangement, Cain said that he relishes working with what he prefers to call his “personal consulting organization.” The number 66,500 illustrates just how beneficial PfizerWorks has been for the company. That’s the number of work hours estimated to have been saved by employees who’ve used PfizerWorks. What about Joe Cain’s experiences? When he gave the Indian team a complex project researching strategic actions that worked when consolidating company facilities, the team put the report together in a month, something that would have taken him six months to do alone. He says, “Pfizer pays me not to work tactically, but to work strategically.” CHAPTER 10 | BASIC ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN Discussion Questions 1. Describe and evaluate what Pfizer is doing with its PfizerWorks. 2. What structural implications—good and bad—does this approach have? (Think in terms of the six organizational design elements.) 3. Do you think this arrangement would work for other types of organizations? Why or why not? What types of organizations might it also work for? 4. What role do you think organizational structure plays in an organization’s efficiency and effectiveness? Explain. 285 11 chapter Let’s Get Real: Meet the Manager Richard “Dickie” Townley Sr. Manager Product Terminals and Marketing Holly Energy Partners, L.P. Artesia, NM MY JOB: You’ll be hearing more from this real manager throughout the chapter. I’m the senior manager of product terminals and marketing for Holly Energy Partners, L.P. My primary responsibility is to oversee the day-to-day operation of multi-state fossil fuel product terminals. BEST PART OF MY JOB: Being part of an industry that is vital to the economic stability of the country. Adaptive Organizational Design 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 11.5 Describe contemporary organizational designs. page 288 Discuss how organizations organize for collaboration. page 293 Explain flexible work arrangements used by organizations. page 297 Discuss organizing issues associated with a contingent workforce. page 299 Describe today’s organizational design challenges. page 300 LEARNING OUTCOMES WORST PART OF MY JOB: Working in an industry that has a black eye for its environmental impact, and the general public not understanding the efforts being taken by the industry to mitigate the environmental impact while still providing the energy the country needs. BEST MANAGEMENT ADVICE EVER RECEIVED: Value what you do, and add value by what you do. 287 A Manager’s Dilemma They’re individuals you might never no pay. At Verizon’s high-speed fiber optic Internet, have thought of as being part of an television, and telephone service,“volunteers” do just organization’s structure, but for many that. Many large corporations, start-up companies, organizations, volunteers provide a and venture capitalists are betting that this “emerg- much-needed source of labor.1 ing corps of Web-savvy helpers will transform the Maybe you’ve volunteered at a field of customer service.” Habitat build, a homeless shelter, or As director of Verizon’s e-commerce unit, Mark some nonprofit organization. How- Studness was familiar with Web sites where users ever, what if the volunteer assignment offered tips and answered questions. His challenge? was at a for-profit business and the Find a way to use that potential resource for cus- job description read like this: “Spend tomer service. His solution? “Super” or passionate a few hours a day, at your computer, users—that is, users who provided the best answers supplying answers online to cus- and dialogue in Web forums. How should Verizon’s tomer questions about technical managers deal with the structural challenges of this matters like how to set up an Internet unique type of work arrangement? home network or how to program a new high-definition television,” all for What Would You Do? Welcome to the fascinating world of organizational structure and design in the twenty-first century! Did you ever consider that a business might actually have work tasks completed by someone other than employees . . . for free? Mark Studness and Verizon were open to trying new ways to do what they’re in business to do and the unusual structural experiment seems to be working well. He describes the company-sponsored customer-service site as a “very productive tool, partly because it absorbs many thousands of questions that would otherwise be expensive calls to a Verizon call center.” In the last chapter, we introduced the basic concepts of traditional organizational design including the six building blocks of an organization’s structure: work specialization, departmentalization, chain of command, span of control, centralization and decentralization, and formalization. In this chapter, we’re going to explore contemporary aspects of organizational design as organizations adapt to the demands of today’s environment. We’re going to first look at some contemporary organizational designs and then move on to discussing how organizations are coping with those demands through collaborative work efforts, flexible work arrangements, and a contingent workforce. We’ll wrap up the chapter by describing some organizational design challenges facing today’s managers. LEARNING OUTCOME Describe contemporary organizational designs. 288 11.1 Contemporary Organizational Designs Microsoft’s Windows 7 was the outcome of a three-year project marked by close collaboration among the thousands of people working on various aspects of the product.2 This approach contrasted sharply with the development of Windows Vista, where the development team had evolved into “a rigid set of silos—each responsible for specific technical features—that didn’t share their plans widely.” With Vista, programming code created by each group might have worked fine on its own, but it caused technical problems when integrated with code created by other groups. Those design issues, as well as internal communications breakdowns, contributed to numerous product delays and defects. CEO Steve Ballmer was adamant about not repeating that mistake. Thus, to “rebuild Windows, Microsoft razed walls”—that is, organizational structure walls that acted as barriers and impediments to efficient and effective work. CHAPTER 11 | ADAPTIVE ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN 289 EXHIBIT 11-1 Team Structure • What it is: A structure in which the entire organization is made up of work groups or teams. • Advantages: Employees are more involved and empowered. Reduced barriers among functional areas. • Disadvantages: No clear chain of command. Pressure on teams to perform. Matrix-Project Structure • What it is: Matrix is a structure that assigns specialists from different functional areas to work on projects who then return to their areas when the project is completed. Project is a structure in which employees continuously work on projects. As one project is completed, employees move on to the next project. • Advantages: Fluid and flexible design that can respond to environmental changes. Faster decision making. • Disadvantages: Complexity of assigning people to projects. Task and personality conflicts. Boundaryless Structure • What it is: A structure that is not defined by or limited to artificial horizontal, vertical, or external boundaries; includes virtual and network types of organizations. • Advantages: Highly flexible and responsive. Utilizes talent wherever it’s found. • Disadvantages: Lack of control. Communication difficulties. Learning Structure • What it is: A structure in which employees continually acquire and share new knowledge and apply that knowledge. • Advantages: Sharing of knowledge throughout organization. Sustainable source of competitive advantage. • Disadvantages: Reluctance on part of employees to share knowledge for fear of losing their power. Large numbers of experienced employees on the verge of retiring. Like Steve Ballmer, many managers are finding that the traditional designs (discussed on pp. 277–278) often aren’t appropriate for today’s increasingly dynamic and complex environment. Instead, organizations need to be lean, flexible, and innovative; that is, they need to be more organic. So managers are finding creative ways to structure and organize work. These contemporary designs include team structures, matrix and project structures, boundaryless organizations, and learning organizations. (See Exhibit 11-1 for a summary of these designs.) Team Structures Larry Page and Sergey Brin, cofounders of Google, created a corporate structure that “tackles most big projects in small, tightly focused teams.”3 A team structure is one in which the entire organization is made up of work teams that do the organization’s work.4 In this structure, employee empowerment is crucial because no line of managerial authority flows from top to bottom. Rather, employee teams design and do work in the way they think is best, but the teams are also held responsible for all work performance results in their respective areas. team structure An organizational structure in which the entire organization is made up of work teams Contemporary Organizational Designs 290 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING In large organizations, the team structure complements what is typically a functional or divisional structure and allows the organization to have the efficiency of a bureaucracy and the flexibility that teams provide. Companies such as Amazon, Boeing, Hewlett-Packard, Louis Vuitton, Motorola, and Xerox, for instance, extensively use employee teams to improve productivity. Matrix and Project Structures Other popular contemporary designs are the matrix and project structures. The matrix structure assigns specialists from different functional departments to work on projects being led by a project manager. (See Exhibit 11-2.) One unique aspect of this design is that it creates a dual chain of command because employees in a matrix organization have two managers: their functional area manager and their product or project manager, who share authority. The project manager has authority over the functional members who are part of his or her project team in areas related to the project’s goals. However, any decisions about promotions, salary recommendations, and annual reviews typically remain the functional manager’s responsibility. The matrix design “violates” the unity of command principle, which says that each person should report to only one boss. Despite that, it can, and does, work effectively if both managers communicate regularly, coordinate work demands on employees, and resolve conflicts together. Many organizations use a project structure, in which employees continuously work on projects. Unlike the matrix structure, a project structure has no formal departments where employees return at the completion of a project. Instead, employees take their specific skills, abilities, and experiences to other projects. Also, all work in project structures is performed by teams of employees. For instance, at design firm IDEO, project teams form, disband, and form again as the work requires. Employees “join” project teams because they bring needed skills and abilities to that project. Once a project is completed, however, they move on to the next one.5 Project structures tend to be more flexible organizational designs, without the departmentalization or rigid organizational hierarchy that can slow down making decisions or taking action. In this structure, managers serve as facilitators, mentors, and coaches. They eliminate or minimize organizational obstacles and ensure that teams have the resources they need to effectively and efficiently complete their work. The Boundaryless Organization The Large Hadron Collider is a $6 billion particle accelerator lying in a tunnel that’s 27 kilometers (17 miles) in circumference and 175 meters (574 feet) below ground near Geneva, Switzerland. “The atom smasher is so large that a brief status report lists EXHIBIT 11-2 Example of a Matrix Organization R&D Marketing Customer Services (CS) Human Resources (HR) Finance Information Systems (IS) Product 1 R&D Group Marketing Group CS Group HR Group Finance Group IS Group Product 2 R&D Group Marketing Group CS Group HR Group Finance Group IS Group Product 3 R&D Group Marketing Group CS Group HR Group Finance Group IS Group CHAPTER 11 | ADAPTIVE ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN 2,900 authors, so complex that scientists in 34 countries have readied 100,000 computers to process its data, and so fragile that a bird dropping a bread crust can short-circuit its power supply.” 6 But exploiting the collider’s potential to expand the frontiers of knowledge has required that scientists around the world cut across “boundaries of place, organization, and technical specialty to conduct ever more ambitious experiments.” The structural arrangement for getting work done that has developed around the massive collider is an example of another contemporary organizational design called the boundaryless organization, which is an organization whose design is not defined by, or limited to, the horizontal, vertical, or external boundaries imposed by a predefined structure.7 Former GE chairman Jack Welch coined the term because he wanted to eliminate vertical and horizontal boundaries within GE and break down external barriers between the company and its customers and suppliers. Although the idea of eliminating boundaries may seem odd, many of today’s most successful organizations are finding that they can operate most effectively by remaining flexible and unstructured: that the ideal structure for them is not having a rigid, bounded, and predefined structure.8 What do we mean by boundaries? There are two types: (1) internal—the horizontal ones imposed by work specialization and departmentalization and the vertical ones that separate employees into organizational levels and hierarchies; and (2) external—the boundaries that separate the organization from its customers, suppliers, and other stakeholders. To minimize or eliminate these boundaries, managers might use virtual or network structural designs. 291 Managing at a distance means both positive and negative. On the positive side, it allows employees to be creative and gives them room to grow. The negative aspects include making decisions, policies, and process without employee input and distancing management from employees. VIRTUAL ORGANIZATIONS. Is an internship something you’ve ever thought about doing (or maybe have done)? How about an internship that you could do, not in a workplace cubicle, but from your couch using your computer?9 Such virtual internships are becoming quite popular, especially with smaller and midsize companies and, of course, with online businesses. The type of work virtual interns do typically involves “researching, sales, marketing, and social-media development”—tasks that can be done anywhere with a computer and online access. Some organizations are structured in a way that allows most employees to be virtual employees. A virtual organization typically consists of a small core of full-time employees and outside specialists temporarily hired as needed to work on projects.10 An example is StrawberryFrog, a global advertising agency with offices in Amsterdam, New York, Sa~ o Paulo, and Mumbai. It does its work with a relatively small administrative staff but has a global network of virtual freelance employees who are hired to work as needed on client projects. By relying on these virtual employees, the company enjoys a network of talent without all the unnecessary overhead and structural complexity.11 NETWORK ORGANIZATIONS. Food marketer Smart Balance Inc. helps people stay trim and lean with its heart-healthy products.12 The company’s organizational structure is also trim and lean. With only 67 employees, the company outsources almost every other organizational function including manufacturing, product distribution, and sales. Smart Balance’s structural approach is one that also eliminates organizational boundaries and can be described as a network organization, which uses its own employees to do some work activities and networks of outside suppliers to provide other needed product components or work processes.13 This organizational form is sometimes called a modular organization by manufacturing firms.14 Such an approach allows organizations to concentrate on what they matrix structure boundaryless organization network organization An organizational structure that assigns specialists from different functional departments to work on one or more projects An organization whose design is not defined by, or limited to, the horizontal, vertical, or external boundaries imposed by a predefined structure project structure virtual organization An organization that uses its own employees to do some work activities and networks of outside suppliers to provide other needed product components or work processes An organizational structure in which employees continuously work on projects An organization that consists of a small core of full-time employees and outside specialists temporarily hired as needed to work on projects 292 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING The Working World in 2020 Flexible Organizations will be temporary. They might last a few weeks or York, Toronto, or London will find themselves with By 2020, a considerably smaller proportion of the a few years, but the presumption is—on the part lots of empty office space. Conversely, job opporlabor force will hold full-time jobs. Organizations of both workers and employers—that the relation- tunities will be geographically dispersed, and in will increasingly rely on contract employees and ship will not become permanent. As such, you will many cases, not dependent at all on where part-timers to get the work done, giving the organ- find yourself consistently working on new projects employees reside. An increasing proportion of the labor force will work from home. And many ization greater flexibility. From the employee’s with a different group of coworkers. Additionally, expect to see fewer large organizations will create regional satellite centers standpoint, it will mean greater individual control of the employee’s future rather than being corporate headquarter buildings and centralized where employees meet or work. These centers corporate centers. Work demands will not require will be less costly to operate than centralized dependent on a single employer. Future workers will be more like outside con- organizations to house large numbers of workers offices and will cut down on commuting distances sultants than full-time employees. Assignments in one place. “Headquarter” cities such as New for workers. do best by contracting out other activities to companies that do those activities best. For instance, the strategy of British company ARM, a microchip designer, is to find a lot of partners. It contracts with those partners for manufacturing and sales. Because ARM doesn’t manufacture, it can encourage its customers (ARM’s chip designs serve as the brains of 98% of the world’s cell phones) to request whatever they like. Such flexibility is particularly valuable in the cell phone market where having custom chips and software can provide an edge.15 At Boeing, the company’s head of development for the 787 Dreamliner manages thousands of employees and some 100 suppliers at more than 100 sites in different countries.16 Sweden’s Ericsson contracts its manufacturing and even some of its research and development to more cost-effective contractors in New Delhi, Singapore, California, and other global locations.17 And at Penske Truck Leasing, dozens of business processes, such as securing permits and titles, entering data from drivers’ logs, and processing data for tax filings and accounting, have been outsourced to Mexico and India.18 Learning Organizations Being a learning organization means being open to resources, technologies, and ideas that may be outside the box. Doing business in an intensely competitive global environment, British retailer Tesco realizes how important it is for its stores to run well behind the scenes.19 And it does so using a proven “tool” called Tesco in a Box, which is a self-contained complete IT system and matching set of business processes that provides the model for all of Tesco’s international business operations. This approach promotes consistency in operations as well as being a way to share innovations. Tesco is an example of a learning organization, an organization that has developed the capacity to continuously learn, adapt, and change. “Today’s managerial challenge is to inspire and enable knowledge workers to solve, day in and day out, problems that cannot be anticipated.”20 In a learning organization, employees continually acquire and share new knowledge and apply that knowledge in making decisions or doing their work. Some organizational theorists even go so far as to say that an organization’s ability to do this—that is, to learn and to apply that learning—may be the only sustainable source of competitive advantage.21 What structural characteristics does a learning organization need? Employees throughout the entire organization—across different functional specialties and even at different organizational levels—must share information and collaborate on work activities. Such an environment requires minimal structural and physical barriers, which allows employees to work together in doing the organization’s work the best way they can and, in the process, learn from each other. Finally, empowered work teams tend to be an important feature of a learning organization’s structural design. These teams make CHAPTER 11 | ADAPTIVE ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN 293 decisions about doing whatever work needs to be done or resolving issues. With empowered employees and teams, there’s little need for “bosses” to direct and control. Instead, managers serve as facilitators, supporters, and advocates. Organizing for Collaboration In 3M’s dental products division, Sumita Mitra, a research scientist, helped develop coatings that prevent tooth plaque and innovative cement bonding materials that could be set by light.22 However, as cosmetic dentistry’s popularity increased, she sensed an opportunity for developing a product that had both the strength and the natural appearance that dentists wanted. Finding that product meant venturing outside the realm of traditional dental materials. Mitra first turned to 3M’s database of technical reports written by the company’s some 7,000 scientists. Although this database is invaluable for spreading knowledge throughout the company, “the real work of collaboration happens face-to-face, often at events sponsored by TechForum, an employee-run organization designed to foster communications between scientists in different labs or division.” There, Mitra found valuable information and guidance from other scientists in different divisions of the company. 3M also has an R&D Workcenter networking Web site, which Mitra describes as “a LinkedIn for 3M scientists.” It also proved to be a valuable collaborative tool. Both the TechForum and the R&D Workcenter proved beneficial for Mitra’s research efforts. Three years after starting her research, 3M introduced Filtek Supreme Plus, a strong, polishable dental material and the first to include nanoparticles. At 3M, employees are expected to collaborate and are evaluated on their success. Such collaborations among the company’s scientists have led to several breakthroughs in product technology. It’s fair to say that the world of work has changed. Organizations need to be more flexible in how work gets done, although it still needs to get done efficiently and effectively. Throw in the fact that innovation and the ability to bring innovations to market quickly is critical and you can begin to appreciate how traditional top-down decision making that strictly follows the chain of command and narrowly defined functional arrangements might not be the best structural mechanisms to do this. Many organizations, like 3M, are encouraging collaborative work among employees. Exhibit 11-3 lists some of the benefits and drawbacks of working collaboratively. An organization’s collaboration efforts can be internal—that is, among employees within the organization. Or those efforts can be external collaborations with any stakeholders. In both types, it’s important that managers recognize how such collaborative efforts “fit” with the organization’s structure and the challenges of making all the pieces work together successfully. Let’s take a look at each of these types of collaboration. 11.2 LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss how organizations organize for collaboration. Benefits Drawbacks EXHIBIT 11-3 • Increased communication and coordination • Potential interpersonal conflict Benefits and Drawbacks of Collaborative Work • Greater innovative output • Different views and competing goals • Enhanced ability to address complex problems • Logistics of coordinating • Sharing of information and best practices Sources: Based on R. Wagner and G. Muller, “The Pinnacle of Partnership: Unselfishness,” Gallup Management Journal Online [http://gmj.gallup.com], February 18, 2010; M. T. Hansen, “When Internal Collaboration Is Bad for Your Company,” Harvard Business Review, April 2009, pp. 83–88; G. Ahuja, “Collaboration Networks, Structural Holes and Innovation: A Longitudinal Study,” Academy of Management Proceedings Online, 1998; and M. Pincher, “Collaboration: Find a New Strength in Unity,” Computer Weekly, November 27, 2007, p. 18. learning organization An organization that has developed the capacity to continuously learn, adapt, and change 294 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING Internal Collaboration When managers believe that collaboration among employees is needed for more coordinated and integrated work efforts, they can use several different structural options. Some of the more popular include cross-functional teams, task forces, and communities of practice. CROSS-FUNCTIONAL TEAMS. Organizations are using team-based structures because they’ve found that teams are more flexible and responsive to changing events than are traditional departments or other permanent work groups. Teams have the ability to quickly assemble, deploy, refocus, and disband. In Chapter 10, we introduced the concept of a cross-functional team in our discussion of the various forms of departmentalization. Remember that it’s a work team composed of individuals from various functional specialties. When a cross-functional team is formed, team members are brought together to collaborate on resolving mutual problems that affect the respective functional areas. Ideally, the artificial boundaries that separate functions disappear and the team focuses on working together to achieve organizational goals. For instance, at ArcelorMittal, the world’s biggest steel company, cross-functional teams of scientists, plant managers, and salespeople review and monitor product innovations.23 The concept of cross-functional teams is even being applied in health care. For instance, at Suburban Hospital in Bethesda, Maryland, intensive care unit (ICU) teams composed of a doctor trained in intensive care medicine, a pharmacist, a social worker, a nutritionist, the chief ICU nurse, a respiratory therapist, and a chaplain meet daily with every patient’s bedside nurse to discuss and debate the best course of treatment. The hospital credits this team care approach with reducing errors, shortening the amount of time patients spent in ICU, and improving communication between families and the medical staff.24 We’ll discuss teams in more detail in Chapter 13. TASK FORCES. Another structural option organizations might use is a task force (also called an ad hoc committee), which is a temporary committee or team formed to tackle a specific short-term problem affecting several departments. The temporary nature of a task force is what differentiates it from a cross-functional team. Task force members usually perform many of their normal work tasks while serving on the task force. However, the members of a task force must collaborate to resolve the issue that’s been assigned to them. When the issue or problem is solved, the task force is no longer needed and members return to their regular assignments. Many organizations, from government agencies to South Korea’s Samsung Electronics Company became the world’s first electronics maker to release three-dimensional LED televisions. Because innovation and speed to market are critical to Samsung’s success, the company encourages collaboration and cooperation among employees within the organization and among its business partners all along the supply chain. At 42 research facilities throughout the world, teams of researchers and engineers collaborate on emerging core technologies. Within its divisions, Samsung uses crossfunctional product development teams to commercialize products scheduled for release within one or two years. CHAPTER 11 | ADAPTIVE ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN 295 universities to businesses, use task forces. For instance, at San Francisco–based accounting firm Eichstaedt & Devereaux, employee task forces have helped develop formal recruiting, mentoring, and training programs. And at Frito-Lay, a subsidiary of PepsiCo, Inc., a task force that included members of the company’s Hispanic employees’ resource group helped in the development of two new products: Lay’s Cool Guacamole potato chips and Doritos Guacamole tortilla chips.25 COMMUNITIES OF PRACTICE. Early in 2008, American soldiers training Afghan and Iraqi armies were having problems using a rocket-propelled grenade launcher. The frustrated unit commander posted a question to one of the U.S. Army’s online forums where soldiers ask questions and share ideas with peers around the world. Within a few days, someone who had had a similar experience with the launcher posted a simple solution on the Web site on how to safely prevent misfiring. Problem solved!26 Such types of internal collaborations are called communities of practice, which are “groups of people who share a concern, a set of problems, or a passion about a topic, and who deepen their knowledge and expertise in that area by interacting on an ongoing basis.”27 For example, repair technicians at Xerox share “war stories” to communicate their experiences and to help others solve difficult problems with repairing machines.28 At pharmaceutical firm Pfizer, communities of practice are integrated into the company’s formal structure. Called employee councils and networks, these communities share knowledge and help product development teams on difficult issues such as safety.29 Pfizer’s more structured approach to recognizing the value of such collaboration is becoming more common. But how effective are these communities of practice? A recent research study found that communities of practice can “create value by contributing to increased effectiveness in employees’ job performance through greater access that they provide to the ideas, knowledge, and best practices shared among community members.”30 Exhibit 11-4 lists some suggestions for making such communities work. In my organization, employees share knowledge by traditional methods such as training, both internal and external; think tank sessions; hands-on utilization; and sharing ideas and processes in a family-like atmosphere outside the workplace. External Collaboration Like our chapter-opening story about Verizon, Intuit has figured out a way to get its customers involved. Diehard users of QuickBooks have access to a site—QuickBooks Live Community—where they can exchange helpful information with others. For customers, that often means faster answers to problems. And for the company, this “volunteer army” EXHIBIT 11-4 • Have top management support and set clear expectations. • Create an environment that will attract people and make them want to return for advice, conversation, and knowledge sharing. • Encourage regular meetings of the community, whether in person or online. • Establish regular communication among community members. • Focus on real problems and issues important to the organization. • Have clear accountability and managerial oversight. Making Communities of Practice Work Sources: Based on R. McDermott and D. Archibald, “Harnessing Your Staff’s Informal Networks,” Harvard Business Review, March 2010, pp. 82–89; S. F. Gale, “The Power of Community, Workforce Management Online, March 2009; and E. Wenger, R. McDermott, and W. Snyder, Cultivating Communities of Practice: A Guide to Managing Knowledge (Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2002). cross-functional team task force (or ad hoc committee) communities of practice A work team composed of individuals from various functional specialties A temporary committee or team formed to tackle a specific short-term problem affecting several departments Groups of people who share a concern, a set of problems, or a passion about a topic, and who deepen their knowledge and expertise in that area by interacting on an ongoing basis 296 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING means less investment in paid technicians.31 External collaboration efforts have become quite popular for organizations, especially in the area of product innovation. We’re going to look at two forms of external collaboration: open innovation and strategic partnerships. Each of these can provide organizations with needed information, support, and contributions to getting work done and achieving organizational goals. But it’s important that managers understand the challenges of how each might fit into the organization’s structural design. OPEN INNOVATION. Pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline PLC opened to the public the designs behind 13,500 chemical compounds associated with the parasite that causes malaria. Glaxo “hopes that sharing information and working together will lead scientists to come up with a drug for treating the mosquito-borne disease faster than the company could do on its own.”32 The days when businesses generate their own product development ideas in house and develop, manufacture, market, and deliver those products to customers may be numbered. Today, many companies are trying open innovation, which is opening up the search for new ideas beyond the organization’s boundaries and allowing innovations to easily transfer inward and outward. For instance, Procter & Gamble, Starbucks, Dell, Best Buy, and Nike have all created digital platforms that allow customers to help them create new products and messages.33 As you can see, many of today’s successful companies are collaborating directly with customers in the product development process. Others are partnering with suppliers, other outsiders, and even competitors. Exhibit 11-5 describes some of the benefits and drawbacks of open innovation. STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIPS. Companies worldwide are finding ways to connect to each other. Once bitter rivals, Nokia and Qualcomm formed a cooperative agreement to develop next-generation cell phones for North America. Nokia also collaborated with Yahoo! in a partnership where Yahoo’s software powers e-mail and chat services on most Nokia phones.34 In today’s environment, organizations are looking for advantages wherever they can get them. One way they can do this is with strategic partnerships, which are collaborative relationships between two or more organizations in which they combine their resources and capabilities for some business purpose. Here are some reasons why such partnerships make sense: flexibility and informality of arrangements promote efficiencies, provide access to new markets and technologies, and entail less paperwork when creating and disbanding projects; risks and expenses are shared by multiple parties; independent brand identification is kept and can be exploited; working with partners possessing multiple skills can create major synergies; rivals can often work together harmoniously; partnerships can take on varied forms from simple to complex; dozens of participants can be accommodated in EXHIBIT 11-5 Benefits and Drawbacks of Open Innovation Benefits Drawbacks • Gives customers what they want—a voice • Allows organizations to respond to complex problems • Nurtures internal and external relationships • Brings focus back to marketplace • Provides way to cope with rising costs and uncertainties of product development • High demands of managing the process • Extensive support needed • Cultural challenges • Greater need for flexibility • Crucial changes required in how knowledge is controlled and shared Sources: Based on S. Lindegaard, “The Side Effects of Open Innovation,” Bloomberg BusinessWeek Online, June 7, 2010; H. W. Chesbrough and A. R. Garman, “How Open Innovation Can Help You Cope in Lean Times,” Harvard Business Review, December 2009, pp. 68–76; A. Gabor, “The Promise [and Perils] of Open Collaboration,” Strategy & Business Online, Autumn 2009; and J. Winsor, “Crowdsourcing: What It Means for Innovation,” BusinessWeek Online, June 15, 2009. CHAPTER 11 | ADAPTIVE ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN 297 partnership arrangements; and antitrust laws can protect R&D activities.35 Strategic partnerships are growing in popularity. However, as with all the collaborative arrangements we’ve described—external and internal—the challenge for managers is finding ways to exploit the benefits of such collaboration while incorporating the collaborative efforts seamlessly into the organization’s structural design. Flexible Work Arrangements 11.3 Accenture consultant Keyur Patel’s job arrangement is becoming the norm, rather than the exception.36 During his recent consulting assignment, he had three clocks on his desk: one set to Manila time (where his software programmers were), one to Bangalore (where another programming support team worked), and the third for San Francisco, where he was spending four days a week helping a major retailer implement IT systems to track and improve sales. And his cell phone kept track of the time in Atlanta, his home, where he headed on Thursday evenings. For this new breed of professionals, life is a blend of home and office, work and leisure. Thanks to technology, work can now be done anywhere, anytime. As organizations adapt their structural designs to these new realities, we see more of them adopting flexible working arrangements. Such arrangements not only exploit the power of technology, but give organizations the flexibility to deploy employees when and where needed. In this section, we’re going to take a look at some different types of flexible work arrangements including telecommuting and compressed workweeks, flextime, and job sharing. As with the other structural options we’ve looked at, managers must evaluate these types in light of the implications for decision making, communication, authority relationships, work task accomplishment, and so forth. Telecommuting Eve Gelb used to endure hour-and-a-half commutes morning and evening on the 405 Freeway in Los Angeles to her job as a project manager at SCAN Health Plan.38 Now, she’s turned her garage into an office and works from home as a telecommuter. On the days when she does have to go in to the corporate office, she shares a space with her three subordinates who also work flexibly. Information technology has made telecommuting possible, and external environmental changes have made it necessary for many organizations. Telecommuting is a work arrangement in which employees work at home and are linked to the workplace by computer. Needless to say, not every job is a candidate for telecommuting, but many are. Working from home used to be considered a “cushy perk” for a few lucky employees and such an arrangement wasn’t allowed very often. Now, many businesses view telecommuting as a business necessity. For instance, at SCAN Health Plan, the company’s chief financial officer said that getting more employees to telecommute provided the company a way to grow without having to incur any additional fixed costs such as office buildings, equipment, or parking lots. In addition, some companies view the arrangement as a way to combat high gas prices and to attract talented employees who want more freedom and control over their work. Despite its apparent appeal, many managers are reluctant to have their employees become “laptop hobos.”39 They argue that employees will waste time surfing the Internet or playing online games instead of working, that they’ll ignore clients, and that they’ll desperately miss LEARNING OUTCOME Explain flexible work arrangements used by organizations. 37 by the numbers 8 percent of companies surveyed have more than 40 percent of their employees working virtually. 44 percent of employees say their top gripe about working from home is not having face-to-face interaction. 40 percent of respondents view collaborating with customers and suppliers as the most significant impact on the amount of time it took to get new products to market. 20 percent of Americans have “nonstandard” jobs (work fewer than 35 hours a week, independent contractors, day laborers, etc.). 12 percent of respondents to a global workforce survey say that telecommuting is extremely important to them. 81 70 percent of employers offer some form of flexible work arrangements. percent of the U.S. workforce qualifies as “mobile” at least part of the time. open innovation strategic partnerships telecommuting Opening up the search for new ideas beyond the organization’s boundaries and allowing innovations to easily transfer inward and outward Collaborative relationships between two or more organizations in which they combine their resources and capabilities for some business purpose A work arrangement in which employees work at home and are linked to the workplace by computer 298 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING Telecommuting can be beneficial because it allows employee flexibility in work schedules, a reduction in company overhead, and convenience for companies with large geographical footprints. the camaraderie and social exchanges of the workplace. In addition, managers wonder how they’ll “manage” these employees. How do you interact with an employee and gain his or her trust when they’re not physically present? And what if their work performance isn’t up to par? How do you make suggestions for improvement? Another significant challenge is making sure that company information is kept safe and secure when employees are working from home. (We’ll discuss this particular issue more fully in Chapter 18 when we look at the control process.) Employees often express the same concerns about working remotely, especially when it comes to the isolation of not being “at work.” At Accenture, where employees are scattered around the world, the chief human resources officer says that it isn’t easy to maintain that esprit de corps.40 However, the company has put in place a number of programs and processes to create that sense of belonging for its workforce, including Web-conferencing tools, assigning each employee to a career counselor, and holding quarterly community events at its offices. In addition, the telecommuter employee may find that the line between work and home becomes even more blurred, which can be stressful.41 Managers and organizations must address these important organizing issues as they move toward having employees telecommute. So, once an organization decides that it wants to establish telecommuting opportunities for employees, what needs to happen next? One of the first issues to address is encouraging employees to make that decision to become remote workers. For instance, at SCAN Health Plan, the company offered free high-speed Internet access and free office furniture, along with help in setting it up to encourage more of its workforce to work from home. Other companies have encouraged employees to work anywhere but at the office by pointing to the pay “increase” employees would receive from money saved on gas, dry cleaning, and eating out at lunch. Other companies have used the “green” angle . . . emphasizing the carbon-free aspect of not driving long distances to and from the workplace. Managing the telecommuters then becomes a matter of keeping employees feeling like they’re connected and engaged, a topic we delve into at the end of the chapter as we look at today’s organizational design challenges. Compressed Workweeks, Flextime, and Job Sharing During the recent economic crisis in the United Kingdom, accounting firm KPMG needed to reduce costs.42 It decided to use flexible work options as a way of doing so. The company’s program, called Flexible Futures, offered employees four options to choose from: a fourday workweek with a 20 percent salary reduction; a two- to twelve-week sabbatical at KPMG has created a culture of flexibility throughout its global network of professional firms that provide audit, tax, and advisory services. Employees of KPMG offices in the United Kingdom, shown here, appreciate flexible working options that include shorter work weeks, working from home, job sharing, and “glide time,” where the start and finish times of the work day can be adjusted. From research and employee surveys, KPMG has learned that flexible work arrangements are becoming increasingly important to all employees as they strive to balance their work–life commitments. Giving employees freedom in scheduling their work helps KPMG attract and retain the best workforce. CHAPTER 11 | ADAPTIVE ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN 299 30 percent of pay; both options; or continue with their regular schedule. Some 85 percent of the U.K. employees agreed to the reduced-workweek plan. “Since so many people agreed to the flexible work plans, KPMG was able to cap the salary cut at about 10 percent for the year in most cases.” The best thing, though, was that as a result of the plan, KPMG didn’t have to do large-scale employee layoffs. As this example shows, organizations may sometimes find they need to restructure work using forms of flexible work arrangements. One approach is a compressed workweek, which is a workweek where employees work longer hours per day but fewer days per week. The most common arrangement is four 10-hour days (a 4-40 program). For example, in Utah, state employees have a mandated (by law) four-day workweek, with offices closed on Fridays in an effort to reduce energy costs. After a year’s time, the state found that its compressed workweek resulted in a 13 percent reduction in energy use and estimated that state employees saved as much as $6 million in gasoline costs.43 Another alternative is flextime (also known as flexible work hours), which is a scheduling system in which employees are required to work a specific number of hours a week but are free to vary those hours within certain limits. A flextime schedule typically designates certain common core hours when all employees are required to be on the job, but allows starting, ending, and lunch-hour times to be flexible. According to a survey of companies by the Families and Work Institute, 81 percent of the respondents now offer flextime benefits. Another survey by Watson Wyatt of mid- and largesized companies found that flexible work schedules was the most commonly offered benefit.44 In Great Britain, McDonald’s is experimenting with an unusual program—dubbed the Family Contract—to reduce absenteeism and turnover at some of its restaurants. Under this Family Contract, employees from the same immediate family can fill in for one another for any work shift without having to clear it first with their manager.45 This type of job scheduling is called job sharing—the practice of having two or more people split a full-time job. Although something like McDonald’s Family Contract may be appropriate for a low-skilled job, other organizations might offer job sharing to professionals who want to work but don’t want the demands and hassles of a full-time position. For instance, at Ernst & Young, employees in many of the company’s locations can choose from a variety of flexible work arrangements including job sharing. Also, many companies have used job sharing during the economic downturn to avoid employee layoffs.46 Contingent Workforce 11.4 At Conrad & Co., a small private accounting firm in Spartanburg, South Carolina, Diana Galvin started as a temporary, part-time employee before moving into a full-time staff accountant position. She got her full-time job by learning how to do and then doing her assignments well and offering suggestions on how the company could improve.47 But not every temporary worker gets offered a full-time job (or wants to be offered one). Prior to her full-time employment, Diana was part of what has been called the contingent workforce. Contingent workers are temporary, freelance, or contract workers whose employment is contingent upon demand for their services. “Stung by massive and disruptive layoffs that accompanied the latest recession, companies are starting to rethink the way they get work done.”48 As organizations eliminate full-time jobs through downsizing and other organizational restructurings, they often rely on a contingent workforce to fill in as needed. Also, one of the top-ranking forecasts in a survey that asked HR experts to look ahead 10 years to 2018 was that “Firms will become adept at sourcing and engaging transient talent around short-term needs, and will focus considerable energy LEARNING OUTCOME Discuss organizing issues associated with a contingent workforce. compressed workweek job sharing contingent workers A workweek where employees work longer hours per day but fewer days per week The practice of having two or more people split a full-time job Temporary, freelance, or contract workers whose employment is contingent upon demand for their services flextime (or flexible work hours) A scheduling system in which employees are required to work a specific number of hours a week but are free to vary those hours within certain limits 300 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING Recognizing a shortage of workers in the Netherlands and a shortage of jobs in Poland, two young Dutch entrepreneurs founded Otto Work Force in 2000 as an agency for temporary workers whose employment is contingent on the demand for their services. At the company’s office in Opole, Poland, shown here, Otto recruits employees to fill requests from Dutch firms for temporary workers for a limited time, usually from one to six months, for a wide range of jobs ranging from cleaning to construction. Otto recruiters provide the workers with travel to the Netherlands, living accommodations, and transportation to and from work. Otto has expanded its business to other countries as more and more firms rely on the contingent workforce. 11.5 LEARNING OUTCOME Describe today’s organizational design challenges. on the long-term retention of smaller core talent groups.”49 The model for the contingent worker structural approach can be seen in the film industry. There, people are essentially “free agents” who move from project to project applying their skills—directing, talent casting, costuming, makeup, set design, and so forth—as needed. They assemble for a movie, then disband once it’s finished and move on to the next project. This type of contingent worker is common in project organizations. But contingent workers can also be temporary employees brought in to help with special needs such as seasonal work. Let’s look at some of the organizational issues associated with contingent workers. One of the main issues businesses face with their contingent workers, especially those who are independent contractors or freelancers, is classifying who actually qualifies as one.50 The decision on who is and who isn’t an independent contractor isn’t as easy or as unimportant as it may seem. Companies don’t have to pay Social Security, Medicare, or unemployment insurance taxes on workers classified as independent contractors. And those individuals also aren’t covered by most workplace laws. So it’s an important decision. For instance, FedEx treats some 12,000 of its package deliverers in its FedEx Ground Division as contractors. Their classification of these workers as independent contractors has caused battles with the Internal Revenue Service and state governments and riled competitor UPS, whose drivers are unionized employees and argues that FedEx’s policy is “unfair to taxpayers, competitors, and the workers themselves.”51 The federal government is also looking at increased power to penalize employers that misclassify workers. So, there is an incentive to be totally above-board in classifying who is and is not an independent contractor. The legal definition of a contract worker depends on how much control a company has over the person; that is, does the company control what the worker does and how the worker does his or her job? The more control the company has, “the more likely the individual will be considered an employee rather than an independent contractor.”52 And it isn’t just the legal/tax issues that are important in how workers are classified. The structural implications, especially in terms of getting work done and how performance problems are resolved, are important, as well. Another issue with contingent workers is the process for recruiting, screening, and placing these contingent workers where their work skills and efforts are needed.53 As we’ll discuss in the next chapter on human resource management, these important steps help ensure that the right people are in the right places at the right times in order to get work done efficiently and effectively. Any organization that wants to minimize potential problems with its contingent workers needs to pay attention to hiring. The final issue we want to look at is the importance of a contingent employee’s performance. Just like a regular employee, a contingent employee is brought on board to do some specific work task(s). It’s important that managers have a method of establishing goals, schedules, and deadlines with the contingent employees.54 And it’s also important that mechanisms be in place to monitor work performance and goal achievement, especially if the contingent employee is working off-site. Today’s Organizational Design Challenges As managers look for organizational designs that will best support and facilitate employees doing their work efficiently and effectively, they must contend with certain challenges. These challenges include keeping employees connected and managing global structural issues. Keeping Employees Connected Many organizational design concepts were developed during the twentieth century when work was done at an employer’s place of business under a manager’s supervision, work tasks were CHAPTER 11 | ADAPTIVE ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN 301 fairly predictable and constant, and most jobs were full-time One senior vice president at Cisco and continued indefinitely.55 But that’s not the way it is today Systems belongs to more internal at many companies. For instance, thousands of Cisco Syscompany teams than “he can tems employees sit at unassigned desks in team rooms intercount on both hands.” While that spersed with communal break areas. At some IBM divisions, only a small percentage of employees—mostly top managers may sound like a nightmare to and their assistants—have fixed desks or offices. All others some, that’s part of the organizaare either mobile employees or they share desks when they tional structure “web” created by need to be at work. At Sabre Holdings, teams are assigned CEO John T. Chambers.57 The to neighborhoods of workspaces and employees find places 56 for themselves when they arrive. structure is so complex that it As these examples show, a major structural design chaltakes some 15 minutes and a lenge for managers is finding a way to offer flexibility but whiteboard to explain it. However, also keeping widely dispersed and mobile employees conChambers uses three words to describe its benefits: “speed, skill, and flexibility.” nected to the organization. Mobile computing and communication technology have given organizations and employees His idea for the company’s structure originated at the end of the 2001 downturn ways to stay connected and to be more productive. For after Cisco wrote off some $2.2 billion in losses. Chambers realized that the instance, handheld devices have e-mail, calendars, and con“company’s hierarchical structure precluded it from moving quickly into new tacts that can be used anywhere there’s a wireless network. markets.” So he began grouping executives into cross-functional teams figuring And these devices can be used to log into corporate databases and company intranets. Employees can videoconference that this would help break down traditional silos and lead to faster decision using broadband networks and Webcams. Many companies making. At first, the executives didn’t like it. Some couldn’t handle working with are giving employees key fobs with constantly changing unfamiliar colleagues; others were upset with the new team-based compensaencryption codes that allow them to log onto the corporate tion structure. However, the company’s decision making has accelerated—it network to access e-mail and company data from any computer hooked up to the Internet. Cell phones switch seamonly took executives eight days to figure out that it made sense to acquire Weblessly between cellular networks and corporate Wi-Fi conferencing company WebEx. connections. The biggest issue in doing work anywhere, anytime, however, is security. Companies must protect their important and sensitive information. Fortunately, software and other disabling devices have minimized security issues considerably. Even insurance providers are more comfortable giving their mobile employees access to information. For instance, Health Net Inc. gave BlackBerry phones to many of its managers so they can tap into customer records from anywhere. As one tech company CEO said, “Companies now can start thinking about innovative apps [applications] they can create and deliver to their workers anywhere.”58 Managing Global Structural Issues Are there global differences in organizational structures? Are Australian organizations structured like those in the United States? Are German organizations structured like those in France or Mexico? Given the global nature of today’s business environment, managers need to be familiar with this issue. Researchers have concluded that the structures and strategies of organizations worldwide are similar, “while the behavior within them is maintaining its cultural uniqueness.”59 What does this distinction between strategy and culture mean for designing effective and efficient structures? When designing or changing structure, managers may need to think about the cultural implications of certain design elements. For instance, one study showed that formalization—rules and bureaucratic mechanisms—may be more important in less economically developed countries and less important in more economically developed countries where employees may have higher levels of professional education and skills.60 Another study found that organizations with people from high power-distance countries (such as Greece, France, and most of Latin America) find that their employees are much more accepting of mechanistic structures than are employees from low power-distance countries. Other structural design elements may be affected by cultural differences as well. No matter what structural design managers choose for their organizations, the design should help employees do their work in the best—most efficient and effective—way they can. The structure should support and facilitate organizational members as they carry out the organization’s work. After all, an organization’s structure is simply a means to an end. 302 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING Do? What Would You Let’s Get Real: My Response to A Manager’s Dilemma, page 288 Richard “Dickie” Townley Sr. Manager Product Terminals and Marketing Holly Energy Partners, L.P. Artesia, NM A volunteer organization structure is not a new concept. We have used the volunteer organization structure for years in the health care system (candy stripers) and in political campaign structures. The difference we find here is the Web-based structure and boundaryless nature of Web forums. Many managers today may not be as technologically savvy as the employees they direct and not comfortable with a boundaryless organizational concept. They see the potential value of a Web-based volunteer organizational structure; however, their working knowledge may be limited. I would take a multiphase approach to setting up a volunteer organizational structure. Web forum utilization would be the key component I would use to design a volunteer structure. Phase one: • Assign managers to work with the information technology group to identify potential Web forums that would be resources for customer service. • Have employees as well as management utilize the Web forums in-house by posing a wide range of user issues. Phase two: Categorize the results of the utilization phase. • Most knowledgeable responses/forums • Most dependable responses/forums • Most user-friendly forums Phase three: • Create a marketing strategy to incorporate these sites into your business model. • Create an organizational flowchart incorporating both the conventional customer service resources and the nonconventional Web forums. Phase four: • Continue to utilize the Web forums in-house to assure quality control and customer satisfaction. PREPARING FOR: Exams/Quizzes CHAPTER SUMMARY by Learning Outcomes Describe contemporary organizational designs. LEARNING OUTCOME 11.1 LEARNING OUTCOME 11.2 LEARNING OUTCOME 11.3 LEARNING OUTCOME 11.4 LEARNING OUTCOME 11.5 In a team structure, the entire organization is made up of work teams. The matrix structure assigns specialists from different functional departments to work on one or more projects being led by project managers. A project structure is one in which employees continuously work on projects. A virtual organization consists of a small core of fulltime employees and outside specialists temporarily hired as needed to work on projects. A network organization is an organization that uses its own employees to do some work activities and networks of outside suppliers to provide other needed product components or work processes. A learning organization is one that has developed the capacity to continuously learn, adapt, and change. It has certain structural characteristics including an emphasis on sharing information and collaborating on work activities, minimal structural and physical barriers, and empowered work team. Discuss how organizations organize for collaboration. An organization’s collaboration efforts can be internal or external. Internal collaborative structural options include cross-functional teams, task forces, and communities of practice. A cross-functional team is a work team composed of individuals from various functional specialties. A task force is a temporary committee or team formed to tackle a specific short-term problem affecting several departments. Communities of practice are groups of people who share a concern, a set of problems, or a passion about a topic, and who deepen their knowledge and expertise in that area by interacting on an ongoing basis. External collaborative options include open innovation and strategic partnerships. Open innovation expands the search for new ideas beyond the organization’s boundaries and allows innovations to easily transfer inward and outward. Strategic partnerships are collaborative relationships between two or more organizations in which they combine resources and capabilities for some business purpose. Explain flexible work arrangements used by organizations. Flexible work arrangements give organizations the flexibility to deploy employees when and where they’re needed. Structural options include telecommuting, compressed workweeks, flextime, and job sharing. Telecommuting is a work arrangement in which employees work at home and are linked to the workplace by computer. A compressed workweek is one in which employees work longer hours per day but fewer days per week. Flextime is a scheduling system in which employees are required to work a specific number of hours a week but are free to vary those hours within certain limits. Job sharing is when two or more people split a full-time job. Discuss organizing issues associated with a contingent workforce. Contingent workers are temporary, freelance, or contract workers whose employment is contingent upon demand for their services. Organizing issues include classifying who actually qualifies as an independent contractor; setting up a process for recruiting, screening, and placing contingent workers; and having a method in place for establishing goals, schedules, and deadlines and for monitoring work performance. Describe today’s organizational design challenges. The two main organizational design challenges for today include keeping employees connected and managing global structural issues. 303 304 PART FOUR | ORGANIZING 11.1 11.5 REVIEW AND DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. Describe the four contemporary organizational designs. How are they similar? Different? 2. Differentiate between matrix and project structures. 3. How can an organization operate without boundaries? 4. The boundaryless organization has the potential to create a major shift in the way we work. Do you agre